Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Abbreviations
- Preface
- 1 Introduction to Renunciation in the Hindu Traditions
- 2 The Ascetic and the Domestic in Brahmanical Religiosity
- 3 Village vs. Wilderness: Ascetic Ideals and the Hindu World
- 4 A Definition of World Renunciation
- 5 From Feast to Fast: Food and the Indian Ascetic
- 6 The Beast and the Ascetic: The Wild in the Indian Religious Imagination
- 7 Deconstruction of the Body in Indian Asceticism
- 8 Contributions to the Semantic History of Saṃnyāsa
- 9 The Semantic History of āśrama
- 10 Renunciation in the Saṃnyāsa Upaniṣads
- 11 Odes of Renunciation
- 12 Ritual Suicide and the Rite of Renunciation
- 13 The Renouncer's Staff: triviṃṭabdha, tridaṇḍa, and ekadaṇḍa
- 14 Pañcamāśramavidhi: Rite for Becoming a Naked Ascetic
- 15 Ānandatīrtha's Saṃnyāsapaddhati: Handbook for Madhvaite Ascetics
- 16 Renouncer and Renunciation in the Dharmaśāstras
- 17 King and Ascetic: State Control of Asceticism in the Arthaśāstra
- Bibliography
- Index
10 - Renunciation in the Saṃnyāsa Upaniṣads
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 February 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Abbreviations
- Preface
- 1 Introduction to Renunciation in the Hindu Traditions
- 2 The Ascetic and the Domestic in Brahmanical Religiosity
- 3 Village vs. Wilderness: Ascetic Ideals and the Hindu World
- 4 A Definition of World Renunciation
- 5 From Feast to Fast: Food and the Indian Ascetic
- 6 The Beast and the Ascetic: The Wild in the Indian Religious Imagination
- 7 Deconstruction of the Body in Indian Asceticism
- 8 Contributions to the Semantic History of Saṃnyāsa
- 9 The Semantic History of āśrama
- 10 Renunciation in the Saṃnyāsa Upaniṣads
- 11 Odes of Renunciation
- 12 Ritual Suicide and the Rite of Renunciation
- 13 The Renouncer's Staff: triviṃṭabdha, tridaṇḍa, and ekadaṇḍa
- 14 Pañcamāśramavidhi: Rite for Becoming a Naked Ascetic
- 15 Ānandatīrtha's Saṃnyāsapaddhati: Handbook for Madhvaite Ascetics
- 16 Renouncer and Renunciation in the Dharmaśāstras
- 17 King and Ascetic: State Control of Asceticism in the Arthaśāstra
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
The Nature and Purpose of Renunciation
In examining the contents of the Saṃnyāsa Upaniṣads, the first, and possible the most significant, issue I want to explore is the Brahmanical self-understanding of the meaning and nature of renunciation. What is the purpose of renunciation? What theological definition of a renouncer's status does the Brahmanical tradition provide? How does that definition affect other significant elements of the Brahmanical religious world? The Saṃnyāsa Upaniṣads do not deal with these issues explicitly. A well-developed theology of renunciation, however, underlies their discussions of such central issues as the rite of renunciation and the rules governing a renouncer's life. It is this theology that I want to explore in this section, drawing on information provided by these and other Brahmanical texts.
A point that we need to bear in mind as we explore the Brahmanical theology of renunciation, however, is that the very institution of renunciation as a single entity was the creation of the same theology (Sprockhoff 1976, 288–95). There were many lifestyles and institutions of holiness, old age, and separation from society in ancient India. Evidence of these institutions is found in the Saṃnyāsa Upaniṣads themselves. The Laghu-Saṃnyāsa Upaniṣad, for example, contains a rite for withdrawal from society in the case of a person who recovers from a lifethreatening illness. Such a withdrawal was probably connected with the rite in extremis described in several major Upaniṣads.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Ascetics and BrahminsStudies in Ideologies and Institutions, pp. 165 - 196Publisher: Anthem PressPrint publication year: 2011