Laurie Patton

laurie2002Laurie Patton, Ph.D., is Professor of Early Indian Religions and Chair of Department of Religion at Emory University. She earned her B.A. from Harvard University and her Ph.D. from the University of Chicago. She earned her B.A. from Harvard University and her Ph.D. from the University of Chicago.
For several years during the last two decades she has made her Indian home in Pune, Maharashtra. Her scholarly interests are in the interpretation of early Indian ritual and narrative, comparative mythology, literary theory in the study of religion, and women and Hinduism in contemporary India.
In addition to over 45 articles in these fields, she is the author or editor of seven books: Authority, Anxiety, and Canon: Essays in Vedic Interpretation (ed.,1994); Myth as Argument: The Brhaddevata as Canonical Commentary (author, 1996); Myth and Method (ed., with Wendy Doniger,1996); Jewels of Authority: Women and Text in the Hindu Tradition (ed., 2002); Bringing the Gods to Mind: Mantra and Ritual in Early Indian Sacrifice (author, 2004) and The Indo-Aryan Controversy: Evidence and Inference in Indian History (ed., with Edwin Bryant, 2005) ; Notes from a Mandala: Essays in the Indian History of Religions in Honor of Wendy Doniger (ed., with David Haberman, forthcoming). Her book of poetry, Fire’s Goal: Poems from a Hindu Year, was published by White Clouds Press in 2003, and her translation of the Bhagavad Gita was published in 2008 by Penguin Press Classics Series. Her next book of poetry, just completed, focuses on the weekly parshiyot of the Jewish ritual year.
One of the glories of Sanskrit poetry, The Bhagavad Gita is the ancient spiritual text that forms a sublime synthesis of the many strands of Hindu belief. Taken from the Mahabharata epic, it details a dialogue between the divine Krishna and the human warrior Arjuna before a mighty battle in which Arjuna must decide whether to wage war against his own family. Krishna imparts spiritual enlightenment to Arjuna, teaching him the paths of knowledge, devotion, action, and meditation, and helping him to see beyond the temporal to the eternal. This new translation captures both the clarity of Hindu philosophy and the beauty of Sanskrit poetry.
This edition was edited and translated by Laurie Patton.


Festival of the Goddess

Mother, you are not Plenty
but a thin and grueling grace
just when I think
I might hold you
swollen and rounded
by coconuts and songs
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