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Sanskrit scholar From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sir James Mallinson, 5th Baronet, of Walthamstow (born 22 April 1970) is a British Indologist, writer and translator. He is Boden Professor of Sanskrit at the University of Oxford,[1] and recognised as one of the world's leading experts on the history of medieval Hatha yoga.[2]
James Mallinson | |
---|---|
Born | 22 April 1970 |
Nationality | British |
Alma mater | University of Oxford |
Occupation | Indology |
Title | Boden Professor of Sanskrit at the Faculty of Asian and Middle Eastern Studies, University of Oxford |
Website | http://www.khecari.com/index.html |
Mallinson became interested in India by reading Rudyard Kipling's novel Kim as a teenager; the book describes an English boy travelling India with a holy man.[3] He was educated at Eton College and the University of Oxford, where he read Sanskrit and Old Iranian for his bachelor's degree, and studied the ethnography of South Asia for his master's degree at SOAS University of London.[4][5] Mallinson is described as "perhaps the only baronet to wear dreadlocks";[3] he let his hair grow out from 1988 on his first visit to India during his gap year.[3] He cut his hair in 2019 after the death of his guru, Mahant Balyogi Sri Ram Balak Das, who had initiated him into the Ramanandi Sampradaya at the Ujjain Kumbh Mela in 1992. Supervised by Alexis Sanderson, his doctoral thesis at Oxford was a critical edition and translation of the Khecarīvidyā with an explanation of its place in the Hatha Yoga traditions.[4]
Mallinson worked as a principal translator for the Clay Sanskrit Library. He became Reader in Sanskrit and Yoga Studies at SOAS, University of London in 2013. He is the author of nine translations and editions of Sanskrit texts on yoga, poetry, or epic tales.[4] He has written numerous book chapters and papers on the history of yoga, in particular the early development of physical or Hatha Yoga,[4] on which he is recognised as the world's leading expert.[2] In 2014 he received a European Research Council Consolidator Grant worth €1.85 million for a five-year six-person research project on the history of Hatha Yoga.[6] In 2018, he opened the SOAS Centre of Yoga Studies.[7] In 2023 he was appointed Boden Professor of Sanskrit at the Faculty of Asian and Middle Eastern Studies, University of Oxford.[8] following the retirement of Christopher Minkowski.[9][10]
Mallinson travels to India each year, and has spent months at a time living as a Sadhu, taking only a blanket and a small bag.[3] He enjoys paragliding including in the Himalayas and has accordingly been nicknamed the "flying yogi", a humorous allusion to the yogic flying of Transcendental Meditation.[3] He has competed internationally for the British paragliding team and won the British Open paragliding competition in 2006.[11] In 2018 he became the first person to cross the eastern Solent on a paraglider.[12][13][14] He has two daughters with his wife Claudia.[15][11] In 2015, Mallinson appeared in the Smithsonian Channel documentary West Meets East with his longtime friend, the actor Dominic West, which was shown in the UK on BBC Four;[16] they visited the Kumbh Mela at Allahabad, where he was ordained as a Mahant (Abbot) of the Terah Bhai Tyagi suborder of the Ramanandi Sampradaya, the only Westerner to receive this honour.[15][3][17]
One of Mallinson's books, Roots of Yoga, with Mark Singleton as co-editor, is accessible to the public as well as to scholars. It contains a selection of texts on yoga from ancient times to the 19th century, presenting the core teachings.
Neil Sims, reviewing the book on the Indian Philosophy Blog, calls the book scholarly, writing that the editors "do an admirable job of letting the texts speak for themselves. No hint of partisanship, or even a preferred view, is given." In Mills's view, the book succeeds both on the level of increasing historical understanding among yoga students and teachers, and in contributing to yoga and South Asian scholarship.[18]
In a review in Yoga Journal, Matthew Remski points to the book's "endlessly diverse sources", which include "new critical translations of over 100 little-known yoga texts dating from 1000 BCE to the 19th century, threaded together with clear and steady-as-she-goes commentary". The translations, he states, "explode the available resources for everyday practitioners." Remski proposes that it may "become the top book on every yoga teacher training reading list in the English-speaking world."[19]
The researcher Adrian Munoz, reviewing the book in Estudios de Asia y África, notes that while it is principally a sourcebook of "innumerable" yoga manuscripts, mainly in Sanskrit, rather than the presentation of any particular thesis, it is accompanied by an erudite 30-page introduction that sets the documents in their historical context.[20]
The yoga teacher Richard Rosen writes that Roots of Yoga is appropriately in Penguin Classics as "this monumental anthology" of some 150 primary Sanskrit sources is destined to become a classic.[21]
The Indologist Alexis Sanderson writes that the anthology's "unprecedented array of sources [...] will be an indispensable companion for all interested in yoga, both scholars and practitioners".[22]
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