Wednesday, December 02, 2009

Review of The Hindus: An Alternative History

Namaste,



The Hindus: An Alternative History by Wendy Doniger of the University of Chicago is really not a history at all. In her book, Doniger retells Hindu stories and provides snarky interpretations. One story is about fusing the head of a Brahmin woman onto the body of a Dalit woman. Doniger provides several variants of the theme of transposed heads.

As I read The Hindus: An Alternative History, I became aware of a pattern: it was as though several authors were writing as Wendy Doniger.

Chapter 18, Philosophical Feuds in South India and Kashmir: 800 to 1300 CE, follows the historical timeline, but is thematically out of place. This chapter discusses the influences that South Indian Shaivism and Kashmiri Shaivism had on each other. This topic could be the subject of its own book.

The whitewash of the plight of Hindus under Mughal rule in Chapters 19 and 20 should come as no surprise. Doniger dedicated her book to William Dalrymple, who romanticizes Mughal India. In her acknowledgements, Doniger singles out Dalrymple for giving her the inspiration to write this book. For a deconstruction of the coverage on Mughal rule of India in The Hindus: An Alternative History, read the essay Hinduism Studies and Dhimmitude in the American Academy by Professor M. Lal Goel.

On the other hand, Chapter 21, Class, Caste, and Conversion in the British Raj, is a sober, even somber exposition of the plight of Hindus and Hinduism under the Raj.

Chapter 23, Hindus in America, reads as though a high school student wrote it, as its skips through examples of how America pop culture has appropriated Hinduism. The chapter does not discuss the establishment of Vedanta centers (for example, St. Louis has had a dedicated building since the 1950s, and the presence of a swami since 1938), waves of Hindu migration to the U.S., acceptance in American society, or establishment of Hindu organizations and institutions, including temples. Although Doniger stridently defends her right as a non-Hindu to tell the story about Hindus and Hinduism, this is one chapter that a Hindu American should have written.

The changes in tone between chapters suggest that there were many writers. Doniger acknowledges the role of her students in contributing to individual chapters, but I suspect that there is more to it to that: namely, the time-honored tradition of having students doing the professor’s work. Call it Doniger's "transposed heads."

Doniger writes in her book The Hindus: An Alternative History, “…the wild misconceptions that most Americans have of Hinduism need to be counteracted precisely by making Americans aware of the richness and human depth of Hindu texts and practices” [page 653], which, according to her, is the purpose of her book.

After completing The Hindus: An Alternative History, I doubt that Americans who read this book without prior introduction to Hinduism would come away with any admiration for Hinduism. It saddens me that one of the appeals of this book to American readers is the dropping of references to pop culture.

I recommend The Hindus: An Alternative History only to those readers who have had a prior introduction to Hinduism. This book requires critical evaluation. Americans who would like a better understanding of Hinduism should consult sources like the Vedanta Catalog for good books on Hinduism. If I might be so immodest, I also recommend that they browse my website and blog, and shop my eStore for books about India and Hinduism.

6 comments:

Sucheta said...

Knowing the presence of 'Wendy's children' I would not be surprized that each chapter in the book 'The Hindus - An alternative history by Wendy Doniger' is written by a different author or 'child' and put together by Wendy as her own.

In her scheme of things, without much repercussions - anything goes.

Bahu of Bengal said...

You're right: with Doniger, anything goes. When she gives a speech, she gives the moderator a copy of "Wendy's Children" to provide introductory remarks.

Unknown said...

Friends:

Now, she is getting an award

Here are the details.

Late last night, it has been brought to my attention by a very, very reliable
source who has read several chapters of WD book, that Wendy Doniger is
the finalist to receive an award, non-fiction category, by the NY Times for
her latest book “The Hindus: An Alternate history”.

Awards ceremony is on March 11, 2010.

I was able to get few more details from NYT blog (included at the end of this e-mail).

Here is a quote from NYT BOLG:

“The National Book Critics Circle announced the finalists for its 2009 book
awards on Saturday night at Housing Works Bookstore Cafe in New York.
The organization consists of some 600 book reviewers and was founded in 1974.”

Who are these 600 book reviewers? Have they read at least even 50 pages of the book?
Or, they just read Pankaj Sharma’s review of this book in NYT
(link- http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/26/books/review/Mishra-t.html?_r=2&ref=books)

Now, we must do something to stop this.

We have very short time for any action.

Any course of action has to be professional, respectful and civil.

So, please let me know, with in next 48 hours, your thoughts/suggestions to stop this award.

Thanks.

Sincerely,

Ram Sidhaye

http://artsbeat.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/01/23/national-book-critics-circle-finalists-are-announced/
January 23, 2010, 7:27 pm
National Book Critics Circle Finalists Are Announced
By THE NEW YORK TIMES
The National Book Critics Circle announced the finalists for its 2009 book awards on Saturday night at Housing Works Bookstore Cafe in New York. The organization consists of some 600 book reviewers and was founded in 1974. The awards will be given out on Thursday, March 11, at the New School in New York. Now for the nominees:

Nonfiction:

Wendy Doniger, The Hindus: An Alternative History (Penguin Press)
Greg Grandin, Fordlandia: The Rise and Fall of Henry Ford’s Forgotten Jungle City (Metropolitan Books)
Richard Holmes, The Age of Wonder: How the Romantic Generation Discovered the Beauty and Terror of Science (Pantheon)
Tracy Kidder, Strength in What Remains (Random House)
William T. Vollmann, Imperial (Viking)

odiamagazine said...

I am extremely sorry to say that so called Sanskrit Scholar Wendy did not manage to understand Rāmāyaņa.

Rāmāyaņa

Philosopher said...

Here is a great summary I found on the net.

http://www.petitiononline.com/dharma10/petition.html

proudhindu said...

reviev of THE HINDUS:AN ALTERNATIVE HISTORY

it s the the duty of all the hindus to protest to ban this book.as the person is completely ignorant of hindus n india. he intentionally wanted to defame us.its the duty for all hindus throughout the world to corner this bad element by going through legal procedure.
BHARAT MATA KI JAI.BANDEMATARAM