The Hindu Religious Tradition by Thomas J. Hopkins, originally published in 1971, provided a comprehensive survey of Hindu development from the Indus civilization to the present. This new edition incorporates up-to-date scholarship to provide a more complete history of Indias cultural and religious development, and is an invaluable resource for students in need of an introduction to the history and practice of Hinduism.
In addition to textual analysis, this book offers a new approach to the study of Hinduism that reconstructs the history of India through an examination of scientific research on geography, archaeology, genetics, art history, linguistic and inscriptions, bringing to awareness the ways that patterns of cultural development, migration, kingship, and technology impacted the synthesis and integration of a wide range beliefs and practices into what we call Hinduism today. Extending beyond the borders of present-day India, The Hindu Religious Tradition shows how Hinduism was influenced by other civilizations in modern day Greece and Iran, and how it influenced them as well. This volume will provide new students of Indian religion with a detailed understanding of Hinduisms rich history and scriptural canons, and it will provide scholars of Hinduism with a fresh perspective rooted in historical detail, offering both a more complete picture of how the Hindu religion is a network of beliefs and practices drawn from multiple civilizations and cultures over its vast history.
The Hindu Religious Tradition by Thomas J. Hopkins, originally published in 1971, provided a comprehensive survey of Hindu development from the Indus civilization to the present.This volume is an invaluable resource for students in need of an introduction to the history and practice of Hinduism.
Preface Introduction
1. The Beginnings of Indian Culture
2. The First
Indian Villages and Cities
3. Indus Valley Religion: Exploring The Remains Of
Indias First Urban Culture
4. Post-Urban Indian Cultures prior to the ryans
5. The Foundations of Hindu Synthesis of ryan and Non-ryans Religion
6.
Early Vedic Religion
7. The rayakas and Upaniads
8. ryans and Dravidians
9. The Development of Non-Vedic India
10. Challenges and Changes: The
Persians and the Greeks Enter India
11. The New Brhmaical Synthesis: Yoga,
Theism, and srama
12. Indo-Greeks and Synthesis in the Hindu Epics
13.
akas, Stavhanas, and the Early Puras
14. Kushns, Guptas, and the
Emergence of Hindu Theism
15. The Continuing Hindu Tradition Index
Thomas J. Hopkins was Professor of Religious Studies at Franklin and Marshall College, USA.
Graham M. Schweig is Professor and Director of Studies in Religion at Christopher Newport University, Virginia, and Distinguished Teaching and Research Faculty at the Center for Dharma Studies, Graduate Theological Union, Berkeley, USA.