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DTSTART:20251102T020000
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DESCRIPTION:Joanne Waghorne\, Professor of Religion\, Syracuse UniversityHi
 ndu Gurus Moving Up: New Sites for Spiritual Practices in Singapore Singap
 ore led Asia in the development of a high-rise world with its largely succ
 essful scheme of owner-occupied government-built housing. These high-rises
  nurture some surprising Hindu-inspired movements in spite of arguments th
 at such an environment supposedly kills the human spirit. All these events
  are Hindu in flavor but often explicitly above ethnicity and even “religi
 on.” What kind of religiosity flourishes in this soon-to-be dominant spati
 al régime in Asia? One answer: Hindu gurus\, but how and why? Sponsored by
  the South Asia Center at the Moynihan Institute of Global Affairs
DTEND:20140401T173000Z
DTSTAMP:20260512T062359Z
DTSTART:20140401T163000Z
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SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:SAC presents: Joanne Waghorne
UID:RFCALITEM639141494396264205
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<p></p><p></p><p><b>Joanne Waghorne</b>\,<i> P
 rofessor of Religion\, Syracuse University</i></p><p><b>Hindu Gurus Moving
  Up: New Sites for Spiritual Practices in Singapore</b> </p><p>Singapore l
 ed Asia in the development of a high-rise world with its largely successfu
 l scheme of owner-occupied government-built housing. These high-rises nurt
 ure some surprising Hindu-inspired movements in spite of arguments that su
 ch an environment supposedly kills the human spirit. All these events are 
 Hindu in flavor but often explicitly above ethnicity and even “religion.” 
 What kind of religiosity flourishes in this soon-to-be dominant spatial ré
 gime in Asia? One answer: Hindu gurus\, but how and why?</p><p> <b><i>Spon
 sored by the South Asia Center at the Moynihan Institute of Global Affairs
 </i></b></p><p></p><p></p>
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