Literature DB >> 20617123

Seekership, Spirituality and Self-Discovery: Ayurveda Trainees in Britain.

Maya Warrier.   

Abstract

This paper examines the backgrounds and motivations of persons trained or training as Ayurvedic practitioners at two London-based institutions offering Ayurveda programmes at undergraduate and postgraduate levels. It draws upon in-depth interviews with individuals at various stages of their training and practice in order to examine the paths that bring them to Ayurveda, their motivations for undergoing training, and the ways in which they apply their knowledge of Ayurveda during and after their training period. The findings here corroborate what other scholars have demonstrated in the case of Asian traditions like Yoga and Ayurveda in the West; these traditions have inevitably undergone shifts in meaning by virtue of their assimilation into the Western, in this case British, holistic health milieu. Most significant in Ayurveda's case is the shift away from a preoccupation with remedial medicine (the bedrock of mainstream Ayurveda in modern South Asia), to a focus on self-knowledge and self-empowerment as a path to 'holistic healing' (understood to address mental and spiritual, not just physical, wellbeing). Even though the Ayurvedic curriculum transmitted at the educational institutions in London is based largely on that taught at Ayurveda colleges in India, the completely different orientations and dispositions of students in Britain (as compared to their South Asian counterparts) ensures that the Ayurveda they go on to apply and practise is radically different - this is 'spiritualised' Ayurveda, in radical contrast to the 'biomedicalised' version obtaining in modern mainstream South Asian contexts.

Entities:  

Year:  2009        PMID: 20617123      PMCID: PMC2898496          DOI: 10.1163/157342009X12526658783691

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Asian Med (Leiden)        ISSN: 1573-420X


  2 in total

1.  Heaps of health, metaphysical fitness: Ayurveda and the ontology of good health in medical anthropology.

Authors:  J S Alter
Journal:  Curr Anthropol       Date:  1999-02

2.  Ayurvedic patients in Germany.

Authors:  Robert Frank; Gunnar Stollberg
Journal:  Anthropol Med       Date:  2002
  2 in total
  4 in total

1.  Perspectives of Indian traditional and allopathic professionals on religion/spirituality and its role in medicine: basis for developing an integrative medicine program.

Authors:  P Ramakrishnan; A Dias; A Rane; A Shukla; S Lakshmi; B K M Ansari; R S Ramaswamy; A R Reddy; A Tribulato; A K Agarwal; J Bhat; N SatyaPrasad; A Mushtaq; P H Rao; P Murthy; H G Koenig
Journal:  J Relig Health       Date:  2014-08

2.  Religious/spiritual characteristics of indian and indonesian physicians and their acceptance of spirituality in health care: a cross-cultural comparison.

Authors:  P Ramakrishnan; A Karimah; K Kuntaman; A Shukla; B K M Ansari; P H Rao; M Ahmed; A Tribulato; A K Agarwal; H G Koenig; P Murthy
Journal:  J Relig Health       Date:  2015-04

3.  Ayurveda: between religion, spirituality, and medicine.

Authors:  C Kessler; M Wischnewsky; A Michalsen; C Eisenmann; J Melzer
Journal:  Evid Based Complement Alternat Med       Date:  2013-11-28       Impact factor: 2.629

4.  The use of ayurvedic medicine in the context of health promotion--a mixed methods case study of an ayurvedic centre in Sweden.

Authors:  Maria Niemi; Göran Ståhle
Journal:  BMC Complement Altern Med       Date:  2016-02-17       Impact factor: 3.659

  4 in total

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