Abstract
In the 1920s, Jagannath G. Gune adopted the tide Swami Kuvalayananda
and established a research centre for the scientific analysis of yoga in
Lonavala, a hill station near Pune. Gune's training under Rajrama Manikrao had
been in 'traditional' athletics and gymnastics, as these were understood to be
the means by which to promote a form of strong, masculine, assertive
anti-colonial nationalism. However, once Gune became the disciple of the sage
Madhavadasji, and received training in āsana and
prdāṇāyāma, he began to reconceptualise the logic of
physical education and physical fitness. For Kuvalayananda, yoga was inherently
scientific, but also in need of scientific analysis to prove its relevance in
the context of modernity. Based on laboratory research on the physiological
effects of āsana and prdāṇāyāma, and by virtue
of his appointment as the director of physical education and sports in the
Bombay Presidency, Kuvalayananda developed a 'scientific' regimen of both
individual and mass drill āsana. In this article, I examine the
logic of Kuvalayananda's reconceptualisation of physical education by means of
yoga with special reference to questions of gender and nationalism in the
discourse of science and in the embodiment of that discourse in practice.
Subject
Medicine (miscellaneous),Complementary and alternative medicine,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous)
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5 articles.
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