Hindu Narratives on Human Rights
This pioneering work examines the existing understanding of Hinduism in relation to human rights discourse.

Written by a leading Hindu scholar, Hindu Narratives on Human Rights is organized around specific rights, such as the right to own property, the rights of children, women's rights, and animal rights. Within these categories and in light of the questions they raise, the book provides a guided tour of Hindu narratives on ethics, ranging from the famous religious epics, the Mahabharata and the Ramayana, to various forms of secular literature drawn from almost a thousand years of Indic civilization.

The realization that Hindu ethical discourse is narrative rather than propositional is a relatively recent one. Hence, the prevailing tendency in the West has been to overlook it in the context of the discussion of human rights. This book was written to correct that oversight. It shows that the presence of the universal in the particular in Hindu stories is a key to understanding Hindu thinking about human rights—and it indicates ways in which Hindu ethical discourse can interact creatively with modern human rights discourse.

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Hindu Narratives on Human Rights
This pioneering work examines the existing understanding of Hinduism in relation to human rights discourse.

Written by a leading Hindu scholar, Hindu Narratives on Human Rights is organized around specific rights, such as the right to own property, the rights of children, women's rights, and animal rights. Within these categories and in light of the questions they raise, the book provides a guided tour of Hindu narratives on ethics, ranging from the famous religious epics, the Mahabharata and the Ramayana, to various forms of secular literature drawn from almost a thousand years of Indic civilization.

The realization that Hindu ethical discourse is narrative rather than propositional is a relatively recent one. Hence, the prevailing tendency in the West has been to overlook it in the context of the discussion of human rights. This book was written to correct that oversight. It shows that the presence of the universal in the particular in Hindu stories is a key to understanding Hindu thinking about human rights—and it indicates ways in which Hindu ethical discourse can interact creatively with modern human rights discourse.

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Hindu Narratives on Human Rights

Hindu Narratives on Human Rights

by Arvind Sharma
Hindu Narratives on Human Rights

Hindu Narratives on Human Rights

by Arvind Sharma

Hardcover

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Overview

This pioneering work examines the existing understanding of Hinduism in relation to human rights discourse.

Written by a leading Hindu scholar, Hindu Narratives on Human Rights is organized around specific rights, such as the right to own property, the rights of children, women's rights, and animal rights. Within these categories and in light of the questions they raise, the book provides a guided tour of Hindu narratives on ethics, ranging from the famous religious epics, the Mahabharata and the Ramayana, to various forms of secular literature drawn from almost a thousand years of Indic civilization.

The realization that Hindu ethical discourse is narrative rather than propositional is a relatively recent one. Hence, the prevailing tendency in the West has been to overlook it in the context of the discussion of human rights. This book was written to correct that oversight. It shows that the presence of the universal in the particular in Hindu stories is a key to understanding Hindu thinking about human rights—and it indicates ways in which Hindu ethical discourse can interact creatively with modern human rights discourse.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780313381614
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 12/21/2009
Pages: 167
Product dimensions: 6.30(w) x 9.30(h) x 0.90(d)

About the Author

Arvind Sharma, PhD, is the Birks Professor of Comparative Religion in the faculty of religious studies at McGill University, Montreal, Canada.

Table of Contents

Introduction
1. Right to Justice
2. Does Hinduism Possess a Concept of Rights?
3. Freedom of Religion
4. Hinduism and the Right to Property
5. Hinduism and the Right to Livelihood
6. Hinduism and the Rights of Children
7. Marriage and the Rights of Women: Sakuntala
8. Marriage and the Rights of Women: Savitri
9. Marriage and the Right of a Women to Choose Her Husband
10. Animal Rights and Hinduism
11. Do Hindu Women Possess the Right to Study the Vedas?
12. The Rights of the Child and the Right to Parenthood: A Case Study
13. A Discussion of Law and Morality from Ancient India
14. Hinduism and Egalitarianism
15. Hinduism and the Rights of the Dead
16. Human Rights, Human Dignity, and Alexander's Invasion of India
Appendix I Universal Declaration of Human Rights
Appendix II Hinduism and Human Rights: A Critical Excursus
Notes
Index
About the Author

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