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Tony steward
Tony steward













tony steward

Stewart's love for racing is evident in the photos of his house. If that's not impressive enough, consider this: there's also a two-story waterfall with trout, a bowling alley, a room with a golf simulator, and a lighted onyx bar. It features six bedrooms, 11 bathrooms, an 8,700-gallon aquarium, a hibachi grill in the kitchen, and it overlooks a lake. Located about an hour away from the Indianapolis airport, Stewart's 20,000-square-foot mansion was built in 2011 on a 415-acre plot. 3 (Winter 2001): 261-88.NASCAR Hall of Fame inductee Tony Stewart is selling what's being referred to as "the finest property ever offered for sale in the state of Indiana." It's a massive, picturesque ranch that the racing champion has configured for wrenching, hunting, and even virtual golfing.

tony steward

In Search of Equivalence: Conceiving Muslim-Hindu Encounter through Translation Theory.Columbia: University of South Carolina Press, 2010, pp. In Rethinking Islamic Studies: From Orientalism to Cosmopolitanism. The Subject and the Ostensible Subject: Mapping the Genre of Hagiography among South Asian Chishtis.“Replicating Vaisnava Worlds: Organizing Devotional Space through the Architectonics of the Mandala.Dhaka: Asiatic Society of Bangladesh, 2020 vol. “Caitanya and the Foundation of Gauḍīya Vaiṣṇavism.” In History of Bangladesh: Sultanate and Mughal Periods (ca.

tony steward

Edited by Ferdinando Sardelli and Lucien Wong. “The Power of the Secret: The Tantalizing Discourse of Vaiṣṇava Sahajiyā Scholarship” in The Legacy of Vaiṣṇavism in Colonial Bengal.ISBN 5-7 BL1285.392C53K43Įxplorations of the ritual and iterary expressions of Bengali religion, with special emphasis on the hermeneutics of Bengal's unique heteroglossia. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University, 1999. With an introduction by the Translator and the Editor. The Caitanya Caritamrta of Krsnadasa Kaviraja. The Lover of God: Rabindranath Tagore's 'Bhanusimher Padavali.' Port Townsend, OR: Copper Canyon Press., 2003. Fabulous Females and Peerless Pirs: Tales of Mad Adventure in Old Bengal.The Final Word: The Caitanya Caritamrta and the Grammar of Religious Tradition.

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Also available free of charge in Luminosoa open access format: Berkeley: University of California Press, 2019, xxxi, 300pp.

  • Witness to Marvels: Sufism and the Literary Imagination.
  • Select publications Monographs & Translationsįrom the 14th century to the present, studies and translations of religious narrative, hagiography, and poetry of Muslim and Hindu traditions of the Bangla-speaking world. The accompanying anthology of fully translated tales, tentatively titled The Needle at the Bottom of the Sea: Writing Bengal into the World of Islam should be released shortly. That literature in turn pointed me to write Witness to Marvels: Sufism and Literary Imagination (California, 2019) which examines the ways the Islamic imaginaire has insinuated itself seamlessly into a Bengali consciousness through mythic heroes who extend their help and protection to anyone regardless of sectarian affiliation. In Fabulous Females and Peerless Pirs (Oxford 2004) I translated eight tales out of several hundred, each focused on the ways women, aided by Satya Pir, keep the world ordered in the wake of male-generated chaos. Satya Pir, who is considered to be both an avatara of Krsna as well as a Sufi saint, represents a rapprochment of Muslims and Hindus in a plural Bengali society in the premodern period. Followers of the Vaisnava traditions also recognize a figure named Satya Pir, which provided a segue into the Islamic literatures of Bengal, especially of the area now known as Bangladesh. This work was preceded by and dependent on a translation of the key text, the encyclopaedic Caitanya Caritamrta of Krsnadasa Kaviraja, which I produced with the late Edward C. Within the Hindu traditions I have focused on the creation of the Gaudiya Vaisnava movement of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, the results of which can be found in my recent monograph titled The Final Word: the Caitanya Caritamrta and the Grammar of Religious Tradition (Oxford 2010). Specialist in the religions and literatures of the Bengali-speaking world Research















    Tony steward