Tantra Within the Context of a Global Religious History of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries
This project aims at reconstructing the genealogy of a
philosophical Tantra that distances itself from sexual
practices, within the context of contemporary debates
about the relationship between science, politics, and
religion. This reconstruction will be carried out in the
context of a global religious history of the nineteenth
and twentieth centuries. It will focus on the British
colonial judge, esotericist and Tantra scholar John
Woodroffe (1865-1936). Although it has received little
scholarly attention, Woodroffe's oeuvre was of decisive
importance for the global reception of a philosophical
Tantra, both in "esoteric" and academic contexts.
An extensive analysis of Woodroffe's writings seeks to
elaborate his understandings of Tantra, religion and
science in the contexts of
Indology/Religionswissenschaft, Advaitic Neo-Hinduism,
esotericism, and Bengali Reform Tantra. Following on
from this, theosophical discourses about Tantra in the
late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, on which
Woodroffe depended, will be discussed, in order to
understand his ideas as a product of previous global
exchanges. On this basis, the double reception of
Woodroffe in science and esotericism from the first half
of the twentieth century onward will be examined, with a
special focus on the construction and transgression of
boundaries between these discourses. Finally, the respective
discourses about Tantra will be discussed in a global
context of religious history.
Researcher: Dr. Julian Strube
Project duration: 2016-2019