A central practice of both premodern and modern yoga, präayama ("breath control") is practised in yoga classes worldwide. Like the notion of präa ("breath", "vitality"), präayama has a longstanding history in South Asia, constituting the fourth limb of Patanjali's yoga. Since roughly 1850, präa and präayama have been reinterpreted in light of the ideas of Hindu reform movements, nineteenth-century occultism, science, biomedicine, and transnational hygiene. In this book, Magdalena Kraler traces the history of yogic breath cultivation between 1850 and 1945 for the first time. She reconstructs how präa assumed a central role in the cosmological frameworks of modern yoga and how präayama came to be understood as a form of self-cultivation. Engaging one of modern yoga's key practices, this book not only offers a thorough academic analysis, but also responds to a growing worldwide interest in breath cultivation.



Autorentext

Magdalena Kraler holds a PhD in Religious Studies (University of Vienna) and an MA in Music and Dance Education (University Mozarteum Salzburg). She currently teaches in Graz.

Titel
Yoga Breath
Untertitel
Pr??a and Pr???y?ma in Early Modern Yoga
EAN
9783847017462
Format
E-Book (pdf)
Veröffentlichung
14.04.2025
Digitaler Kopierschutz
frei
Dateigrösse
12.41 MB
Anzahl Seiten
447