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Transnational Yoga at Work: Spiritual Tourism and Its Blind Spots is an ethnography about local wageworkers in the Indian branches of a transnational yoga institution and about yoga practitioners and spiritual tourists who visualize peace through yoga. Practitioners' aspirations for peace situate them at the heart of an international movement that has captured the imagination of cosmopolitans the world over, with its purported benefits to mind, body, and spirit. Yoga is thought to offer health, vitality, and relief from depression through control of body and breath. Yet, the vision of peace in this institution is a partial vision that obscures the important but seemingly peripheral others of its self-conception. Through in-depth ethnographic analysis, this book explores the processes through which global spiritual movements can have peace front and center in their vision and yet condone and perpetuate cycles of injustice and social inequality that form the critical and problematic foundations of our global economy. The book privileges the experiences and hardships faced by Indian wageworkers-most of them women -but it also offers a sympathetic portrayal of international yoga practitioners and of the complex patterns of work and worship central to a global mission.
For more information, check out A conversation with Laura E. Klepinger, author of Transnational Yoga at Work: Spiritual Tourism and Its Blind Spots
List of contents
Chapter 1: Biography of the SYVC in the Context of Transnational Yoga
Chapter 2: Bodies, Blood, and the Land of Modern Yoga: Competing Claims to a Transnational Practice
Chapter 3: Wage Work and Kitchen Hands: Paid Laborers and the Karma Yoga Ethic
Chapter 4: Visible Suffering and the Making of Peace: On Homeless Dogs, Cat Palaces, and Poor People Food
Chapter 5: Real Neighbors and Imagined Communities
Chapter 6: #Sorrynotsorry: Fieldwork, Containment, and the Women Yogis of the SYVC
About the author
By Laurah E. Klepinger
Summary
In this ethnography, Laurah E. Klepinger examines wageworkers, yoga practitioners, and spiritual tourists in a transnational yoga institution. Klepinger argues that the institution’s peacebuilding mission obscures the patterns of injustice and social inequality it reproduces.