14 research outputs found
Authority in the Virtual Sangat : Sikhism, Ritual and Identity in the Twenty-First Century
In her paper Authority in the Virtual Sanga. Sikhism, Ritual and Identity in the Twenty-First Century, Doris Jakobsh analyses the change of authority based on her research on Sikhs on the Internet. She stresses the Web as a âthird placeâ of communication among the Sikhs as well as the phenomenon of new authorities online. However, this does not imply the replacement of the traditional seats of authority, the Akal Takht, SGPC, or gurdwara managements, but one can recognize a significant shift away from these traditional sites of authority toward the ânew authoritiesâ, the intermediaries of cyberspace. Her analysis shows that this aspect of the Sikh experience brings with it the most profound challenges and, most importantly, a need to bridge the post-modern individual, i.e. âSikh traditionâ intertwined and legitimated by the metanarrative, and the proliferation of new authorities who have become intermediaries of Sikhism online by virtue of their expertise within the digital domain
Seeking the Image of âUnmarkedâ Sikh Women: Text, Sacred Stitches, Turban
With the inauguration of the Khalsa in 1699 by the tenth guru of the Sikhs, Guru Gobind Singh, a new understanding of âbeing Sikhâ was put in place. In examining the earliest prescriptive texts of the Khalsa, manifestations of Sikh religio-cultural identity and visual distinctiveness were deeply connected to the male Sikh body. This study locates Sikh women within a number of these early ritual and textual ordinances while also exploring how Sikh female religio-cultural materiality is contradistinct to the normative Khalsa male body. The production of phulkaris, a form of embroidered head covering (but having other uses as well) was historically associated with Sikh women and are here examined as alternate forms of religious belonging, ritual production and devotion. This study concludes with an examination of how the turban, for a small number of diasporic Sikh women, can be understood both as a rejection of traditional Sikh female ideals, as well as a novel form of Sikh womenâs identity construction that is closely aligned with Sikh masculine ideals
Relocating gender in Sikh history : transformation, meaning and identity
The term 'gender' has been defined as an evolutionary, fluid construct;
gendered realities are thus open to the vicissitudes of circumstance and time,
emerging and developing with the shifting needs of the community within which
they unfold. An analysis of gender construction is thus a useful mechanism to
interpret the historical process on the whole. This theoretical position forms the
framework for a reinterpretation of the Sikh community in the colonial context.
The Sikh tradition itself has been part of an evolutionary process. From a
primary focus on interior religiosity upon its inception, Sikhism developed into an
increasingly militaristic order with highly prescribed exterior symbols and rituals.
Accompanying this shift was a 'theology of difference', giving religious, symbolic
and ritual sanctioning to a specific gender hierarchy. With a primary focus on male
Sikh identity, female religious identity was relegated to a secondary position.
Under-girding the annexation of Punjab into the British Empire were
Victorian notions of the 'manly Christian', Christianized imperialism and chivalry,
alongside rigid female ideals such as the 'helpmate'. The Sikhs came to be highly
favoured by their imperial masters for their monotheistic ideals and what was
perceived as their 'manly' and militaristic character. This hyper-masculine,
militaristic construct, already enshrined within Sikh history through the creation of
the Khalsa in 1699 received renewed emphasis by the British administration. The
Singh Sabha reform movement initiated in the late-nineteenth century ingeniously
accommodated selected aspects of the Victorian worldview into their reform agenda,
particularly with regard to gender constructs.
Leaders of the Singh Sabha began to actively safeguard Sikh interests in a
political milieu increasingly defined by communal rivalry. A Sikh renaissance was
born, bringing about a successful focus on linguistic concerns of the Sikhs,
education, literature and a highly selective interpretive process of Sikh history and
religion.
Gender politics were pivotal to virtually all aspects of this endeavour. Novel
interpretations and in certain instances 'inventions' of distinct female ritual
traditions and symbolism alongside female educational initiatives fostering the
'ideal' Sikh woman were central to the objectives of the Singh Sabha reform
movement.Arts, Faculty ofAsian Studies, Department ofGraduat