|
|
|
Journal of Vaishnava Studies Volume 12, No. 1, Fall 2003 Contents
Introduction The Sri-krsnastakam of Girisacandra
Vidyaratna Forty Verses in Praise of "The King of
Mountains" The Song Goes Ever On: A Brief Look at the Uddhava
Gita The Abduction of Rukmini Women's Songs for the Marriage of Tulsi and
Krishna in Benares Selections from the Poetry of Andal and Nammalvar Sri Chaitanya's Siksastakam Visvanatha's Gurvastakam and the
Understanding of the Guru in Chaitanyaite Vaishnavism Gems from the Gita-Bhusana Bathing in the Hari-bhakti-vilasa Suddha Vaisnavera Paricaya The Shri Radha Viraha Madhuri Alavantar's Catuh Sliki Book Review Steven J. Rosen, Editor, Journal of Vaishnava Studies and author of several books on Vaishnava-related subjects. Brian A. Hatcher, Professor Religion and Humanities and Chair of the Department of Religion at Illinois Wesleyan University David Haberman, Professor and Chair of the Department of Religious Studies at Indiana University. Edwin F. Bryant, Assistant Professor, Department of Religion at Rutgers University. Tracy Coleman, Assistant Professor of South Asian Religions at Colorado College Tracy Pintchman, Associate Professor and Director of the Asian Studies Program at Loyola University Chicago. Vasudha Narayanan, Professor of Religion, University of Florida and immediate past president of the American Academy of Religion. Jan Brzezinski, co-editor of online repository of Sanskrit texts and other Vaishnava-related materials (www.granthamandira.org). Graham Schweig, Assistant Professor of Philosophy and Religious Studies, Christopher Newport University, Newport News, Virginia Senior editor of JVS. Dvija Mani dasa, teacher of Gaudiya Vaishnava theology. Mans Broo, Lecturer, Department of Comparative Religion, Abo Akademi University, Finland. Jason D. Fuller, Visiting Assistant Professor of Asian Religions at Washington and Lee University. Gerald T. Carney, Professor of Religion at Hampden-Sydney College in Virginia. Nancy Ann Nayar, Independent Research Scholar specializing in the tradition of Srivaishnavism. |