Lifelong commitment to ascetic life and orders: Hindu women renunciants in India

Based on the survey of 3,699 Hindu women renunciants across six Hindu-based orders/faith-based organisations in India that encourage women’s renunciation and lifelong commitment to religious life and ascetism, this paper maps their profile, religiosity, spirituality, reasons for joining the order, f...

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Main Author: Samta P. Pandya
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2017-01-01
Series:Cogent Social Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311886.2017.1293469
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spelling doaj-1e88496068c0475490283d2d17f230392021-03-18T15:46:36ZengTaylor & Francis GroupCogent Social Sciences2331-18862017-01-013110.1080/23311886.2017.12934691293469Lifelong commitment to ascetic life and orders: Hindu women renunciants in IndiaSamta P. Pandya0Tata Institute of Social SciencesBased on the survey of 3,699 Hindu women renunciants across six Hindu-based orders/faith-based organisations in India that encourage women’s renunciation and lifelong commitment to religious life and ascetism, this paper maps their profile, religiosity, spirituality, reasons for joining the order, fears, future plans, strategies of dealing with life in the order and strategies to enhance life quality, as well as their perceived meaning in life. Results of the logistic regression analysis showed that Hindu women renunciants with higher education and higher scores on religiosity and spirituality scales had joined the orders/FBOs by choice and personal inclination or commitment to faith and the charismatic teacher, had a greater propensity to get more involved in varied activities the orders/faith-based organisations, and perceived a higher meaning in life. Substantiating the gap of macro data on Hindu women’s renunciation, this paper then stresses on newer nuances of this form of women’s ascetism whose crux lies in challenging the prescribed cultural time-tables for women such as marriage and motherhood by emphasizing celibacy, that deem in-depth exploration.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311886.2017.1293469womenhindurenunciationascetic lifeorders/faith-based organisationssurvey
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Samta P. Pandya
spellingShingle Samta P. Pandya
Lifelong commitment to ascetic life and orders: Hindu women renunciants in India
Cogent Social Sciences
women
hindu
renunciation
ascetic life
orders/faith-based organisations
survey
author_facet Samta P. Pandya
author_sort Samta P. Pandya
title Lifelong commitment to ascetic life and orders: Hindu women renunciants in India
title_short Lifelong commitment to ascetic life and orders: Hindu women renunciants in India
title_full Lifelong commitment to ascetic life and orders: Hindu women renunciants in India
title_fullStr Lifelong commitment to ascetic life and orders: Hindu women renunciants in India
title_full_unstemmed Lifelong commitment to ascetic life and orders: Hindu women renunciants in India
title_sort lifelong commitment to ascetic life and orders: hindu women renunciants in india
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Cogent Social Sciences
issn 2331-1886
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Based on the survey of 3,699 Hindu women renunciants across six Hindu-based orders/faith-based organisations in India that encourage women’s renunciation and lifelong commitment to religious life and ascetism, this paper maps their profile, religiosity, spirituality, reasons for joining the order, fears, future plans, strategies of dealing with life in the order and strategies to enhance life quality, as well as their perceived meaning in life. Results of the logistic regression analysis showed that Hindu women renunciants with higher education and higher scores on religiosity and spirituality scales had joined the orders/FBOs by choice and personal inclination or commitment to faith and the charismatic teacher, had a greater propensity to get more involved in varied activities the orders/faith-based organisations, and perceived a higher meaning in life. Substantiating the gap of macro data on Hindu women’s renunciation, this paper then stresses on newer nuances of this form of women’s ascetism whose crux lies in challenging the prescribed cultural time-tables for women such as marriage and motherhood by emphasizing celibacy, that deem in-depth exploration.
topic women
hindu
renunciation
ascetic life
orders/faith-based organisations
survey
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311886.2017.1293469
work_keys_str_mv AT samtappandya lifelongcommitmenttoasceticlifeandordershinduwomenrenunciantsinindia
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