Thank you, Brian, for sharing this very sad news.  Having just returned from 
the AOS annual meeting, I feel heartbroken to know that Alf has left the world 
before I could tell him goodbye and thank him for so many things.  Alf was 
generous to young scholars because he always wanted to learn more and he 
learned from everyone, no matter how small and insignificant their oeuvre 
compared to his, a towering genius in our field.  I think Alf was a bhakta at 
heart, and I hope upon his passing, he beheld Krishna's cosmic form without 
fear, all his desires fulfilled, all his questions answered, his being vast and 
free and blissful.

With respect to Alf, and sympathy for his family,
Tracy Coleman
________________________________
From: INDOLOGY <[email protected]> on behalf of Collins, 
Brian via INDOLOGY <[email protected]>
Sent: Tuesday, March 14, 2023 8:40 AM
To: Indology <[email protected]>
Subject: [INDOLOGY] Alf Hiltebeitel 1942-2023

This email originated outside Colorado College. Do not click links or 
attachments unless you know the content is safe.

Dear Colleagues,


I am sorry to report that Alf Hiltebeitel passed away in the Republic of 
Colombia a few days ago. It doesn’t need saying, but he was a giant in the 
field and made important contributions as a historian of religions, an 
ethnographer, a philologist, and a scholar of intellectual history. He even 
continued producing scholarship well after his advanced Parkinson’s made it 
impossible to speak and very difficult to write.


He was most well known for his work on the Mahābhārata epic. And over the 
course of his life, he practically produced an epic of his own.


His first book, The Ritual of Battle (Cornell 1976), and his two most recent 
books, Nonviolence in the Mahābhārata (Routledge 2016) and World of Wonders 
(Oxford 2021) add up to about 800 pages combined. The two volumes of The Cult 
of Draupadī, Vol. 1, Mythologies: From Gingee to Kurukṣetra (Chicago 1988) and 
Vol. 2, On Hindu Ritual and the Goddess (Chicago 1991), are another 1000 pages 
or so.


The two “rethinking” books, Rethinking India’s Oral and Classical Epics: 
Draupadī among Rajputs, Muslims, and Dalits (Chicago 1999) and Rethinking the 
Mahābhārata: A Reader’s Guide to the Education of the Dharma King (Chicago 
2001), are about another 900 pages.


Reading the Fifth Veda: Studies on the Mahābhārata and When the Goddess Was a 
Woman: Mahābhārata Ethnographies (Brill 2011), are about 1200 pages altogether. 
Dharma: Its Early History in Law, Religion, and Narrative (Oxford 2011) is 
about 700 pages. The two Freud books, Freud’s India and Freud’s Mahābhārata 
(Oxford 2018), are 600 combined pages.


We get an estimated total of 5,200 pages (roughly the same size as Bibek 
Debroy’s ten-volume English translation of the Mahābhārata) if we stop this 
partial bibliography there. But Alf did not stop there, and was working on a 
book about Vyāsa as late as last year.


There won’t be another like Alf. He will be sorely missed by his students and 
his colleagues, but will never be forgotten as long as English readers still 
want to grapple with the immensity of India’s Great Epic.

With condolences to his friends and family especially,

Brian

Assoc. Prof. Brian Collins
(He/Him/His)
Department Chair and Drs. Ram and Sushila Gawande Chair in Indian Religion and 
Philosophy
Department of Classics and Religious Studies
234 Ellis Hall
Ohio University
Athens, Ohio
740-597-2103 (office)


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