2019
DOI: 10.3390/rel10020071
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Prayers of Cow Dung: Women Sculpturing Fertile Environments in Rural Rajasthan (India)

Abstract: In line with the special issue’s focus on material religion and ritualistic objects, this article focuses on the multi-sensory prayers that certain groups of Hindu women craft in cow dung at the doorstep of their residences during Divali. This yearly ritual of kneading and praying with cow dung is known as the Govardhan puja (worship of Mount Govardhan). It is generally said to be the worship of the popular cowherd god Krishna and the natural environment he inhabits. Ethnographic research into the multiple mea… Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…Notermans did (participant) observations of women working in the fields and performing various religious rituals to enchant and honor the land. These observations were combined with small talks, informal conversations, interviews in combination with photo elicitation, and household surveys (see Notermans 2019). In 2019, Swelsen joined Notermans' research in her final Bachelor project of the Cultural Anthropology and Development Studies program and explored women's attitudes towards land legislation in the same and in two more villages: Nayakheda and Bhuwana.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Notermans did (participant) observations of women working in the fields and performing various religious rituals to enchant and honor the land. These observations were combined with small talks, informal conversations, interviews in combination with photo elicitation, and household surveys (see Notermans 2019). In 2019, Swelsen joined Notermans' research in her final Bachelor project of the Cultural Anthropology and Development Studies program and explored women's attitudes towards land legislation in the same and in two more villages: Nayakheda and Bhuwana.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These verbal expressions show there is a continuum rather than a rupture between (speech) language and (ritual) action. That said, they mostly praise, discuss, or comment on human kinship rather than the more-than-human kinship we focus on in this section (for women's songs accompanying the rituals, see Notermans (2019)).…”
Section: Fundingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…India, with more than 300 million cattle, ranks highest in the global cattle inventory. Incorporating cow excreta into daily life is a longstanding tradition in India ( 16 , 17 ), significantly more so than in the rest of the world. Many Indians consume products that contain cow excreta; for example, Panchagavya, which is ingested as an Ayurvedic medicine, contains milk, ghee, and curd but also cow dung and urine ( 18 ).…”
Section: Opinion/hypothesismentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is believed that cow dung is considered as a miraculous reward of life cycle for an organism to die and reborn for the sake of growth of life once again. These are evidentually seen from the hindu rituals performed in the pooja called as "govardhan puja" 39 .…”
Section: Qualities In Cow Dungmentioning
confidence: 99%