Academic literature on the topic 'Hindus – Folklore'

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Journal articles on the topic "Hindus – Folklore"

1

Subaharianto, Andang, Ghanesya Hari Murti, Erna Cahyawati, Dyah Purwita Wardani, and Imam Basuki. "Cerita Beji Antaboga dalam wacana harmonisasi alam dan antaragama." Diglosia: Jurnal Kajian Bahasa, Sastra, dan Pengajarannya 7, no. 1 (2024): 99–106. http://dx.doi.org/10.30872/diglosia.v7i1.884.

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The Beji Antaboga tourist site provides a religious atmosphere full of tolerance by building various statues of religious symbols located in a forest in Banyuwangi. The harmony between humans and nature is very well maintained at this location. This nuance is supported by a fictional story that is believed by the local community, namely the Antaboga dragon. However, the place is fully taken care of by Hindus who are indeed attached to protecting the surrounding nature, and their commitment to guard several points of springs. This research aims to measure the inter-religious relations in the ar
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2

Festino, Cielo. "Grinding Songs from Goa." Aletria: Revista de Estudos de Literatura 31, no. 1 (2021): 225–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.35699/2317-2096.2021.25541.

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The aim of this paper is to bring an analysis of oviyos, folkloric songs that Indian women from the Hindu community of Goa, former Portuguese colony in India used to sing while working at the grinding stone. These songs, a sample of Goan folklore, were collected by Heta Pandit in the book Grinding Stories. Songs from Goa (2018), based on her field work with singers Subhadra Arjun Gaus, Saraswati, Dutta Sawant and Sarojini Bhiva Gaonkar. The songs, sung in a dialect of Marathi-Konkani, were transcribed into English. These elaborate songs are of psychological and social significance as they prov
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3

RAY, SOHINI. "Boundaries Blurred? Folklore, Mythology, History and the Quest for an Alternative Genealogy in North-east India." Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain & Ireland 25, no. 2 (2014): 247–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1356186314000510.

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AbstractThis paper analyses the use of religious folklore among the Meitei people of Manipur in northeastern India in the creation of a racial identity. After the Meiteis, who are ethnically Southeast Asian, were forced to convert to Hinduism in the early eighteenth century by the Manipuri king Garibniwaz, they were provided with a number of folklores regarding their origin that combined Hindu and indigenous Meitei deities and myths. Recently, the rise of anti-Hindu sentiment in Manipur—spurred by a movement to revive the indigenous Meitei religion and a strained political relationship with In
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4

López, Junior, Manuel Cabrera, and Fernando Ocampo. "La importancia de enseñar Ciencias Sociales al estudiante en la actualidad." Revista Cognosis. ISSN 2588-0578 6, EE-I- (2021): 35. http://dx.doi.org/10.33936/cognosis.v6i0.3396.

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Reflexionar nos convence de que la excelencia está dentro de cada ser humano. La historia nos demuestra que un ser humano hambriento es capaz de matar, pero por el deseo de obtener reconocimiento es capaz de morir tal como sucedió con los apóstoles o con los millones de hindúes que supieron imponer la resistencia pacífica. Trasladando esto a la importancia de enseñar las Ciencias Sociales al estudiante en la actualidad es rescatar los hechos de pasado, asumir una conciencia social de nuestro entorno, valorar nuestra cultura y saber que no existen países pobres sino gobiernos improvisados o reg
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5

Sutarto, Ayu. "Sastra Lisan Tengger Pilar Utama Pemertahanan Tradisi Tengger." ATAVISME 12, no. 1 (2009): 9–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.24257/atavisme.v12i1.153.9-21.

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Artikel ini bertujuan membahas sastra lisan Tengger sebagai tiang utama pemertahanan tradisi Tengger dengan pendekatan folklor. Sastra lisan yang dibahas adalah legenda Kasada dan Karo serta mantera. Dalam sejarah, legenda Kasada pernah terpengaruh oleh proses islamisasi, sementara legenda Karo memiliki pesan kultural yang menganjurkan persatuan dan kesatuan dalam perbedaan iman antara Budha-Hindu dan Islam. Meskipun demikian, dalam rekam jejak sejak era kolonial, legenda Kasada dan Karo serta mantra mengalami perubahan. Sastra lisan tersebut dapat bertahan hidup karena pewaris aktifnya telah
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6

Lidova, N. R. "Muṭiyēṯṯu – Field Research of Kerala Folklore Theatre". Orientalistica 5, № 3 (2022): 644–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.31696/2618-7043-2022-5-3-644-659.

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The paper is dedicated to the results of the field research conducted in Tripunithura (India / March 2013) on Muṭiyēṯṯu theatre, one of the local folklore art forms of Kerala. It is argued that the inclusion of Muṭiyēṯṯu in 2010 in the list of Masterpieces of the Oral and Intangible Cultural Heritage / UNESCO, became a turning point in the recent history of this art form, affecting it both in positive and negative way. The positive aspect concerns primarily a fundamental shift in the level of popularity of Muṭiyēṯṯu, manifested in the appearance of a number of research projects, general public
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7

Lepekhova, Elena. "The transformation of the wrathful deity Mahākāla into the god of happiness and good luck Daikokuten in Japanese Buddhism." Vostok. Afro-aziatskie obshchestva: istoriia i sovremennost, no. 3 (2022): 135. http://dx.doi.org/10.31857/s086919080020211-9.

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The transformation of the wrathful deity Mahākāla into the god of happiness and fortune Daikokuten in Japanese Buddhism. This study is devoted to the process of the transformation of the wrathful Hindu deity Mahākāla into the god of happiness and fortune Daikokuten in Japanese Buddhism. While in Hinduism and Vajrayāna Buddhism, Mahākāla was a wrathful deity, performing the functions of the Dharma protector, then as a result of the transference of this deity to the Japanese culture, his functions changed. The earliest examples of this process have been already marked in China, from where they l
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8

Zain, Shaharir Bin Mohd. "The Malayonesian Cosmological Doctrines in Some Past Scientific Writings in Malay." Andalas International Journal of Socio-Humanities 2, no. 1 (2020): 30–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.25077/aijosh.2.1.30-49.2020.

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The Malayonesian cosmological doctrines highlighted here are based on the study of the five Malay inscriptions dated 5th century to 14th century A.D, a traditional Malay folklore on cosmology compiled by Abdullah (1984), and a well known best seller Malay manuscript entitled Taj al-Muluk edited by Syaikh Ismail al-Asyi (1893). We find that the Malayonesian cosmology changes as the people change their religion successively from Hindu to Buddha and to Islam as such that their cosmology became a syncretism of Hindu-Buddha cosmology and Islamic cosmology (after 13th century A.D). But in the second
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9

Zain, Shaharir bin Mohd. "The Malayonesian Cosmological Doctrines in Some Past Scientific Writings in Malay." Andalas International Journal of Socio-Humanities 2, no. 1 (2020): 30–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.25077/aijosh.v2i1.13.

Full text
Abstract:
The Malayonesian cosmological doctrines highlighted here are based on the study of the five Malay inscriptions dated 5th century to 14th century A.D, a traditional Malay folklore on cosmology compiled by Abdullah (1984), and a well known best seller Malay manuscript entitled Taj al-Muluk edited by Syaikh Ismail al-Asyi (1893). We find that the Malayonesian cosmology changes as the people change their religion successively from Hindu to Buddha and to Islam as such that their cosmology became a syncretism of Hindu-Buddha cosmology and Islamic cosmology (after 13th century A.D). But in the second
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10

Zain, Shaharir bin Mohd. "The Malayonesian Cosmological Doctrines in Some Past Scientific Writings in Malay." Andalas International Journal of Socio-Humanities 2, no. 1 (2020): 30–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.25077/aijosh.v2i1.13.

Full text
Abstract:
The Malayonesian cosmological doctrines highlighted here are based on the study of the five Malay inscriptions dated 5th century to 14th century A.D, a traditional Malay folklore on cosmology compiled by Abdullah (1984), and a well known best seller Malay manuscript entitled Taj al-Muluk edited by Syaikh Ismail al-Asyi (1893). We find that the Malayonesian cosmology changes as the people change their religion successively from Hindu to Buddha and to Islam as such that their cosmology became a syncretism of Hindu-Buddha cosmology and Islamic cosmology (after 13th century A.D). But in the second
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
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