Mantras in Religion, Media and Society in Global Southern Asia
The MANTRAMS project aims to create a global history and anthropology of mantras, exploring their diverse cultural significance and impact from ancient South Asia to modern global contexts.
Projectdetails
Introduction
Over 4 million people in Europe, including Hindu, Buddhist, Sikh minorities, and Yoga practitioners, use mantras—sacred utterances, formulas, or syllables—for the purposes of ritual, prayer, contemplation, and wellness. The term “mantra” itself has entered the vocabulary of most modern European languages.
Research Questions
But how do mantras work? Where do they come from, and how did they spread around the globe? Despite their ubiquity and relevance, mantras have seldom been studied in their own right.
Project Overview
This project will produce an unprecedented global history and anthropology of mantras, grounded in the PIs’ expertise on the very places and traditions where mantras originate–southern Asia, where mantras have been used in rites, meditation, worship, and healing for more than 3000 years.
Cultural Significance
As mantras have been transmitted through diasporic networks, new religious movements, yoga, and the internet, they have become central to religion and culture worldwide. They also play a key role in traditional medicine and identity politics.
Scholarly Approach
Most scholarship to date has approached mantras through language and philology, privileging Sanskrit texts from elite contexts. Yet mantras have always been diverse, multimodal, and multisensory, manifesting in:
- Manuscripts
- Stones
- The voice through chanting
- The mind through meditation
- The body through amulets, tattoos, and clothing
Project Goals
Bringing together leading scholars working across disciplines and cultural regions, this 6-year project will create sonic, visual, and digital textual archives on the transcultural and multisensory lives of mantras.
Deliverables
Together with an exceptional array of academic deliverables and a museum exhibition, the MANTRAMS project will raise awareness of mantras’ significance from their origins in ancient South Asia to their modern ramifications in the global North.
Conclusion
The MANTRAMS project will produce the first-ever scientific project entirely dedicated to understanding the relevance of mantras at a global scale.
Financiële details & Tijdlijn
Financiële details
Subsidiebedrag | € 9.651.263 |
Totale projectbegroting | € 9.651.263 |
Tijdlijn
Startdatum | 1-9-2024 |
Einddatum | 31-8-2030 |
Subsidiejaar | 2024 |
Partners & Locaties
Projectpartners
- UNIVERSITAT WIENpenvoerder
- EBERHARD KARLS UNIVERSITAET TUEBINGEN
- THE CHANCELLOR, MASTERS AND SCHOLARS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD
- ECOLE PRATIQUE DES HAUTES ETUDES
Land(en)
Vergelijkbare projecten binnen European Research Council
Project | Regeling | Bedrag | Jaar | Actie |
---|---|---|---|---|
Monsoon Asia as the Nexus for the Transfer of Tantra along the Maritime routesThis project aims to explore the translocal impact of Tantra across Monsoon Asia from the 7th to 13th century, emphasizing cultural connections and shared religious heritage beyond regional boundaries. | ERC Consolid... | € 1.972.125 | 2024 | Details |
Locating Literature, Lived Religion, and Lives in the Himalayas: The Van Manen CollectionThis project aims to comprehensively study the Van Manen collection of Himalayan texts and artifacts using historical and digital methods to enhance understanding of their cultural significance. | ERC Starting... | € 1.496.250 | 2023 | Details |
Giving Voice to Hispanic Chant through a Phylogenetic Study of Medieval PlainchantRESOUND aims to revive and restore the silent Hispanic chant melodies using innovative interdisciplinary methods, enhancing understanding of medieval European cultural dynamics. | ERC Advanced... | € 2.499.500 | 2023 | Details |
Corpora in Greater Gandhāra: Tracing the Development of Buddhist Textuality and Gilgit/Bamiyan Manuscript Networks in the First Millennium of the Common EraThis project aims to analyze newly discovered early Buddhist manuscripts from Greater Gandhāra, creating a digital archive to enhance understanding of their textual transmission and scribal networks. | ERC Starting... | € 1.500.000 | 2024 | Details |
Manuscript Culture in the Age of PrintThe PRIMA project aims to redefine Early Modern Europe's manuscript culture by uncovering its significance in literature and science, challenging the dominance of print through innovative research methods. | ERC Advanced... | € 2.499.369 | 2024 | Details |
Monsoon Asia as the Nexus for the Transfer of Tantra along the Maritime routes
This project aims to explore the translocal impact of Tantra across Monsoon Asia from the 7th to 13th century, emphasizing cultural connections and shared religious heritage beyond regional boundaries.
Locating Literature, Lived Religion, and Lives in the Himalayas: The Van Manen Collection
This project aims to comprehensively study the Van Manen collection of Himalayan texts and artifacts using historical and digital methods to enhance understanding of their cultural significance.
Giving Voice to Hispanic Chant through a Phylogenetic Study of Medieval Plainchant
RESOUND aims to revive and restore the silent Hispanic chant melodies using innovative interdisciplinary methods, enhancing understanding of medieval European cultural dynamics.
Corpora in Greater Gandhāra: Tracing the Development of Buddhist Textuality and Gilgit/Bamiyan Manuscript Networks in the First Millennium of the Common Era
This project aims to analyze newly discovered early Buddhist manuscripts from Greater Gandhāra, creating a digital archive to enhance understanding of their textual transmission and scribal networks.
Manuscript Culture in the Age of Print
The PRIMA project aims to redefine Early Modern Europe's manuscript culture by uncovering its significance in literature and science, challenging the dominance of print through innovative research methods.