Liz Bucar Profile picture
Sep 9, 2022 23 tweets 10 min read Read on X
Not to pile it on (I know the queen just died) but here’s a bummer of a Friday thread for you:

I’m about to problematize your namaste.

#namastekilljoy
#StealingMyReligion
@Harvard_Press @HarvardUPLondon
1/Let’s start with the word: “Namaste.” It is a Sanskrit word deriving from the verb namaha, meaning “to bend.” The te at the end means “to you.”
In the Vedas namaste was used to show respect
to a divinity. But the word evolved over time….
2/In everyday use namaste evolved to mean “salutations to you” or “greetings to you,” a sign of respect, but without necessarily referencing divinity. This is how namaste, and its other regional forms, such namaskar and namaskaram, are commonly used in South Asia today.
3/That means to close a yoga class with namaste is like ending with “hello.”
4/Yoga teachers say namaste can be translated as “the light in me bows to the light in you.” Rather than the everyday South Asian namaste as a greeting, this yoga namaste references the religious meaning found in the Vedic texts, yet without any specific religious content.
5/Namaste becomes a spiritual shortcut, one that can be assigned any meaning the yoga practitioner desires. It adds acoustic gravitas, but only through the reinvention of a foreign word.
6/Scholars are not sure exactly when namaste began to be used in yoga instruction, but today it is a common part of wellness yoga practice. Solemnly, reverently, hands pressed together at the heart’s center, often with a bow of gratitude, namaste “seals the practice.”
7/ How was this namaste get invented? Step one: Imperialism (I told you I was going to pile on). British colonial administrators used certain phrases, like namaste, as representative of Indian culture in colonial records.
wellcomecollection.org/pages/YLC0GxEA…
8/Step two: Religious appropriation. Mainstream wellness yoga is happy to borrow exotic/foreign/eastern devotional practices to seem more “authentic,” BUT insists these practices are not religious = namaste as a form of pseudo-liturgy.
9/@DrArjana has a term for this, “muddled Orientalism,” the “careless mixing of images, terms, and tropes from the imagined Orient.” Muddled orientalism is how namaste gets infused with liturgical meaning in a US yoga studi when, in a South Asian context, the word = a greeting.
10/ And of course orientalism depends on the assumption that the west is superior to the east and therefore entitled to grab us and use anything eastern it wants to (again…..imperialism)
11/ Put simply, namaste is a way yoga teachers invoke ancient wisdom traditions without doing the hard work of truly understanding and incorporating the full traditions and roots of yoga in modern practice. And namaste is a way YOU think you are accessing those traditions too.
12/ Why does this matter? Like all forms of appropriation, harm is caused if the borrowing occurs within conditions of inequity and injustice and guess what, your yoga namaste certainly does that.
13/ South Asian Americans have pointed this (a lot). Check out this NPR piece by @kukzandladders which includes this quote:
"I always mute it at the end of white people Yoga videos. I launch out of corpse pose like ants bit me to hit the button in time."
npr.org/sections/codes…
14/ See also @rsputcha's terrific research blog, namaste nation, which is a teaser for her next book (I can't wait!):

rumyaputcha.com
15/ Also read and follow @SusannaWellness (who is active on IG @susannabarkataki) and check on this fun reel she recently posted with #BlairImani:
instagram.com/reel/CiAjyZtql…
16/ What’s a yogi to do? One suggestion is to consider if you use namaste, WHY? Is it part of your ritual (but do you also insist that yoga is NOT religious?) Does if change the way think abt namaste to learn it offends some folks/makes them feel unwelcome in yoga studios?
17/ A couple of years ago, I would say “namaste” in a
yoga class out of habit, without understanding what I was saying.
18/ But now I never chant “namaste.” I now experience this ritual as a fetishization of Indian culture, finding it upsetting rather than soothing. I now hear ignorance, entitlement, imperialism, & capitalism instead of an innocent “sealing of my practice.”
19/ The more I learn about yoga, the more uncomfortable I become. And that is a GOOD thing. It is a sign that I am becoming more aware of my role in the larger systems of injustice--such as capitalism, orientalism, and white supremacy--that my consumption of yoga depends on.
20/ If you, too, are ending this thread uncomfortable, #sorrynotsorry. There are no quick fixes to the ethical dilemmas of religious appropriation. Let’s try to sit with the discomfort and then see if we might do better.
21/Want even more discomfort? #StealingMyReligion is officially out next Tuesday!

amazon.com/Stealing-My-Re…

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More from @BucarLiz

Sep 16, 2023
1/@UChiDivinity is searching for assistant professor(s) in the area of RELIGIOUS ETHICS and I met with the Dean while I was on campus this week and have his permission to help translate the ad a bit (please forward this to anyone you think might be interested). 🧵
2/First, full disclosure: I completed my MA and PhD at @UChiDivinity. I credit that institution, faculty, and my peers with the career I have—which I love! So I’m biased, but I think this is a very special place and a terrific opportunity for the right scholar(s).
3/Here is some "translation" of some key language from the ad:
“UChi Div invites applications for tenure-track position(s) at the rank of Assistant Professor"
=That “(s)” is IMPORTANT: they would be delighted if able to extend offers to not just one, but TWO scholars!
Read 16 tweets
Sep 27, 2022
As promised, here is a thread about #DiversityStatements for scholars on the job market based on a conversation Sarah Pierce Taylor and I had last week at @UChiDivinity and my experience participating in a ton of searches at @Northeastern which takes DEI VERY seriously:
1/When I went first on the market a LOOOOONG time ago, diversity statements were not a thing, and unfortunately a lot of senior faculty who mentor doctoral students have zero experience writing them, so folks often feel on their own trying to figure them out.
2/But higher ed has changed (thank GOD!) so now many jobs require a some sort of statement of commitment to DEI/or will ask an interview question about this topic.
Read 10 tweets
Feb 23, 2020
I’ve gotten asked a bunch about negotiating a tenure-track job offers this month, so time for a thread.

1/My first piece of advice is simple: negotiate the terms of a TT offer you receive. Negotiation is expected, it’s the norm, even if no one ever taught you how to do it.
2/Approach the negotiation with a positive attitude (not entitled). Let them know you are excited to be their colleague.
3/Overall, don't frame your ask as "I need/deserve more" but more like "there are just a few things I need to do THE BEST JOB I CAN FOR YOU."
Read 15 tweets
Jan 3, 2020
PLS RT: Now accepting applications from religion scholars for a @Sacred_Writes media partnership with @pritheworld on role of religion in India’s current political climate.

Applications are due 1/10.

We are working on an official announcement but here are the details:
@Sacred_Writes @pritheworld This partnership requires graduate level training in religious studies, theology, biblical studies, or a related field and is open to faculty, independent and contingent scholars, and graduate students.
@Sacred_Writes @pritheworld This is to help shape a MAJOR radio news report about the role of religion in India’s current political climate and work with @pritheworld's brilliant correspondent @RupaShenoy while doing so on 2-4 profile stories for radio and online.
Read 9 tweets
Dec 15, 2019
I'm helping lead a workshop on #publicscholarship for humanities faculty at @Carleton_PW tomorrow, and preparing a handout with tips for writing for non-academic audiences. Sharing here, including a list of further reading at the end, b/c twitter threads with GIFs are my jam:
@Carleton_PW First the "Dos":
1/ Do read more popular writing, and then as @SarahEBond has said, try to imitate that style with citation habits of scholars. You are likely a scholar because you are good a learning things...so learn from the best writers out there!
@Carleton_PW @SarahEBond 2/ Do identify which publics you want to reach. Perhaps there are conversations you what to shift or communities you want to reach/advocate for? Who you want to speak to will determine where you want to pitch.
Read 24 tweets
Oct 5, 2019
I’ve been involved in mentoring a lot of TT folks, so here is thread about being strategic with PUBLISHING in case it is helpful:
I’m tenured and promoted to full. I’ve written ltrs for colleague’s dossiers for our depart, served on my college’s P&T committee & as an outside reviewer for tenure cases.

Norms will differ by discipline. I think my experience will mostly resonant with humanities folks.
1/ You NEVER know how long you will be at an institution, so be sure to produce work that is legible elsewhere. Great if your current home base is like “three outputs before tenure, any form or forum” but just know that if you follow that it will be harder to move.
Read 15 tweets

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