Jeffrey J. Kripal

Jeffrey John Kripal (Ph. D., University of Chicago, 1993) is the J. Newton Rayzor Professor of Religious Studies and Chair of the Department of Religious Studies at Rice University, Houston, Texas. His areas of interest include the comparative erotics and ethics of mystical literature, American countercultural translations of Asian religions, and the history of Western esotericism from ancient gnosticism to the New Age.[1] Kripal has a Ph.D. from the University of Chicago Divinity School.

Contents

Main works

Kali's Child

Kripal's 1995 book Kali's Child: The Mystical and the Erotic in the Life and Teachings of Ramakrishna was a study of the Bengali mystic Ramakrishna. The book won the American Academy of Religion's History of Religions Prize for the Best First Book of 1995.[2] A second, revised edition was published in 1998. The book has been dogged by controversy ever since its initial publication in 1995.[3] The thesis of the book has been questioned by scholars like Gayatri Spivak,[4] Alan Roland and members of the Ramakrishna Mission, such as Swami Tyagananda and Pravrajika Vrajaprana.[5]

Esalen: America and the Religion of No Religion

In 2007 The University of Chicago Press released Esalen: America and the Religion of No Religion, Kripal's account of the Esalen Institute, the retreat center and think-tank located in Big Sur, California. Writing in the Journal of American History, Catherine Albanese called it "a highly personal account that is also a superb historiographical exercise and a masterful work of analytical cultural criticism."[6]

Authors of the Impossible

In May 2009, XL Films began production on a documentary film based on Kripal's forthcoming book, Authors of the Impossible. As in the book, the film traces the history of psychical phenomena through the last two centuries of Western thought. The film profiles four thinkers: the British psychical researcher F. W. H. Myers, the American anomalist writer and humorist Charles Fort, the astronomer, computer scientist, and ufologist Jacques Vallee, and the French philosopher Bertrand Méheust. The film is being produced by Ken Kosub and Jeffrey J. Kripal, and directed by Scott H. Jones.[7]

Notes

  1. ^ Jeffrey J. Kripal's faculty page at the Department of Religious Studies, Rice University.
  2. ^ Kurien, Prema A. (2007). "Challenging American Pluralism". A place at the multicultural table. Rutgers University Press. pp. 201–202. 
  3. ^ Balagangadhara, S.N.; Sarah Claerhout (Spring 2008). "Are Dialogues Antidotes to Violence? Two Recent Examples From Hinduism Studies" (PDF). Journal for the Study of Religions and Ideologies 7 (19): 118–143. http://www.jsri.ro/new/?download=19_balagangadhara_claerhout.pdf. 
  4. ^ Spivak, Gayatri Chakravorty (December 28, 2007). "Moving Devi". Other Asias. Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 195–197. 
  5. ^ Tyagananda, Swami; Vrajaprana (2010). Interpreting Ramakrishna: Kali's Child Revisited. Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass. pp. xvii-xviii. ISBN 978-8120834996. 
  6. ^ Catherine Albenese, [untitled review] Journal of American History Mar 2008, 1326 [1]
  7. ^ "Authors of the Impossible". http://authorsoftheimpossible.com/. 

Partial list of publications

Books authored

Books edited

Articles and other

External links

See also