Roots of Yoga PDF
Roots of Yoga PDF
Roots of Yoga PDF
Yoga is hugely popular around the world today, yet until now little
has been known of its roots. This book collects, for the first time,
core teachings of yoga in their original form, translated and edited
by two of the worlds foremost scholars of the subject. It includes
a wide range of texts from different schools of yoga, languages
and eras: among others, key passages from the early Upanisads
.
and the Mahabharata,
and from the Tantric, Buddhist and Jaina
traditions, with many pieces in scholarly translation for the first time.
Covering yogas varying definitions across systems, its most important
practices, such as posture, breath control, sensory withdrawal and
meditation, as well as models of the esoteric and physical bodies,
Roots of Yoga is a unique and essential source of knowledge.
Roots of Yoga
Date: 18/11/2016
Designer: Freelance / Jim
Production Controller:
ISBN: 9780241253045
Spine Width 25.5mm
Estimated
Confirmed
Format B
129mm x 198mm
Paper
Print
CMYK
Other (see below)
Finishes
Pantone 1505C
Gloss Varnish
(Spot Matt Page Two)
Proofing Method
Digital plus wet proofs
Digital only
No further proof required.
Archive files supplied
C L A S S I C S
Penguin Literature
UK 10.99
77 88 00 22 44 11 22 55 33 00 44 55
99 00 00 00 00
C L A S S I C S
SB
BN
N 978-0-241-25304-5
978-0-241-25304-5
II S
99
9780241253045_RootsOfYoga_COV.indd 1
P E N G U I N
asana
Cover: tapkara
(the ascetics
posture). From a c.1830 illustrated
manuscript of the Jogapradipaka
The British Library Board
C L A S S I C S
Additional Instructions:
(Including spec changes)
Roots of Yoga
Translated and wit h an introduction by
JAM ES M AL L I NSON and M A R K S I N G L E TON
21/11/2016 14:23
Roots of Yoga
Translated and Edited
with an Introduction by
james mallinson and mark singleton
p e ngu i n b o o k s
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PENGUIN CLASSICS
U K | USA | Canada | Ireland | Australia
India | New Zealand | South Africa
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whose addresses can be found at global.penguinrandomhouse.com.
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sustainable future for our business, our readers
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book is made from Forest
Stewardship Council certified paper.
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Contents
ROOTS OF YOGA
1. Yoga
2. Preliminaries
46
3. Posture
86
4. Breath-control
127
171
6. Yogic Seals
228
7. Mantra
259
283
9. Samdhi
323
359
11. Liberation
395
Glossary
Primary Sources
Secondary Literature
Notes
Acknowledgements
Index
437
443
455
473
507
511
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Introduction1
Over the last three decades there has been an enormous increase
in the popularity of yoga around the world. The United Nations
recent declaration of an International Day of Yoga 2 is symbolic of
yogas truly globalized status today. Along with this globalization, however, has come metamorphosis: yoga has adapted to
social and cultural conditions often far removed from those of its
birthplace, and in many regions has taken on a life of its own,
independent of its Indian roots. The global diffusion of yoga
began at least a century and a half ago, since which time yoga has
continued to be refracted through many new cultural prisms, such
as New Age religion, psychology, sports science, biomedicine, and
so on. 3
In spite of yogas now global popularity (or perhaps, rather,
because of it), a clear understanding of its historical contexts in
South Asia, and the range of practices that it includes, is often lacking. This is at least partly due to limited access to textual material.4
A small canon of texts, which includes the Bhagavadgt, Patajalis Yogastras, the Hathapradpik and some Upanisads, may
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i nt roduc t ion
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xi
i nt roduc t ion
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xii
i nt roduc t ion
below p. xiii). Its long exegetical tradition is not one of practice but
of philosophy. Although this exegesis is vital to understanding the
development of metaphysical speculation in South Asia, particularly in orthodox contexts, it is not our focus here, in that it does
not significantly contribute to a history of yoga practices. Those
interested in the philosophical traditions associated with the
Ptajalayogastra should consult Philipp Maass forthcoming
sourcebook of yogas classical dualist philosophy.
Finally, it is worth pointing out that this is not a manual of
yoga practice. It is a work of scholarship documenting a wide
range of yoga methods, a few of which may cause injury or illness,
and some of which may even lead to physical and/or cognitive
death, if practised successfully. The reader undertakes the practices described in this book entirely at his or her own risk.
H I S TOR IC A L OV E RV I E W
Yoga in Vedic-era Sources
Prior to about 500 bce there is very little evidence within South
Asian textual or archaeological sources that points to the existence of systematic, psychophysical techniques of the type which
the word yoga subsequently came to denote. Passages in the oldest Sanskrit text, the fifteenth- to twelfth-century bce Rg Veda
(the earliest of the four Vedas, the textual foundation of orthodox, Vedic Hinduism) indicate the use of visionary meditation
and its famous hymn to a long-haired sage (10.136) suggests a
mystical ascetic tradition similar to those of later yogis.12 The
somewhat later Atharva Veda (c. 1000 bce),13 in its description of
the Vrtya, who, like the long-haired sage, exists on the fringe of
mainstream Vedic society, mentions practices which may be forerunners of later yogic techniques of posture and breath-retention
(on the latter, see 4.1), and the Jaiminya Upanisad Brhmana
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