Editorial

Authors

  • Simon Brodbeck Cardiff University
  • Dermot Killingly University of Newcastle
  • Anna King University of Winchester

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/rosa.34405

Keywords:

Buddhism, Jain, Bengal, Spalding Symposium, Indian Religions

Author Biographies

Simon Brodbeck, Cardiff University

Cardiff University

Dermot Killingly, University of Newcastle

former Reader in Hindu Studies, University ofNewcastle upon Tyne

Anna King, University of Winchester

Anna S. King is Reader in Theology and Religious Studies at the University of Winchester, and attached to the University of Winchester Centre of Religions for Reconciliation and Peace. She trained as a social anthropologist at the Institute of Social and Cultural Anthropology, Oxford. She is the contributing editor with Professor John Brockington of The Intimate Other: Love Divine in Indic Religions (Delhi: OrientLongman, 2004), and contributing editor of Indian Religions: Renaissance and Renewal (London: Equinox, 2006). Anna has published in the areas of contemporary spirituality(ies), and global Hinduism and Islam. She has a long-standing interest in Vaishnavism and ISKCON and has two articles, ‘For Love of Krishna’, and ‘Thealogising Radha’, in The Hare Krishna Movement: Forty Years of Chant and Change (ed. Graham Dwyer and Richard J. Cole; London and New York: I. B. Tauris: 134–67, 193–29). Recent articles on ISKCON include ‘Vedic Science and Modern Science’; ‘Krishna’s Cows: ISKCON’s Animal Theology and Practice’, and ‘Krishna’s Prasadam: “Eating our Way back to Godhead”’. Anna was consultant to the 2012 ethnographic film LEAP directed by the Finnish director, Jouko Aaltonen. She is Convenor of the annual Spalding Symposium on Indian Religions, and founder and joint editor of Religions of South Asia (RoSA).

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Published

2017-08-10

How to Cite

Brodbeck, S., Killingly, D., & King, A. (2017). Editorial. Religions of South Asia, 10(2), 127–130. https://doi.org/10.1558/rosa.34405

Issue

Section

Editorial