Share the story of what Open Access means to you
![a graphic of a lock that is open, the universal logo for open access](/assets/oa-lock-logo-lg-a95dd8d9f9fe5e21ab4499ffd0c8661e55f7d788ae0a03f19a6749eb82e3e899.png)
University of Michigan needs your feedback to better understand how readers are using openly available ebooks. You can help by taking a short, privacy-friendly survey.
Transcendent in America: Hindu-inspired meditation movements as new religion
Lola Williamson-
Frontmatter
-
A Note on Transliteration (page vii)
-
Preface (page ix)
-
PART I : BACKGROUND
-
1 What Are Hindu-Inspired Meditation Movements? (page 3)
-
2 Laying the Foundation for American-Style Hinduism (page 26)
-
-
PART II : THREE HINDU-INSPIRED MEDITATION MOVEMENTS
-
3 Self-Realization Fellowship (page 55)
-
4 Transcendental Meditation (page 80)
-
5 Siddha Yoga (page 106)
-
-
PART III: IN THEIR OWN WORDS
-
6 The Guru-Disciple Relationship (page 135)
-
7 Mystical Experiences (page 161)
-
8 Worldview (page 186)
-
-
Conclusion (page 215)
-
Notes (page 235)
-
Bibliography (page 243)
-
Index (page 251)
![](/image-service/37720d3121531326656/full/full/0/default.png)
Citable Link
Published: c2010
Publisher: New York University Press
- 9780814794494 (hardcover)
- 9780814794708 (ebook)
- 9780814794500 (paper)