Neela Bhattacharya Saxena's Absent Mother God of the West: A Kali lover's journey into Christianity and Judaism is a rare gem of a book.... All in all, Dr. Saxena's vast, encyclopedic knowledge seems as cosmological as the Mother Goddess's domain, and her ability to fuse genres together is impressive. Absent Mother God of the West attests to Saxena's supreme virtues as thinker, writer, teacher, and scholar. It is a pleasure to watch this impressive author discover underground regions where the Goddess, in her incarnations such as Theotokos and Our Lady of Czestochowa, thrive in Europe and still reign as "Shakti-Shekinah" energy in India. By delving into the mysteries herself, she gives her readers permission to take their own chthonic impulses seriously and provides them with a template to follow in their own quest for the sacred feminine.
— Argument: Biannual Philosophical Journal
It is imperative to emphasize the fact that [Absent Mother God of the West] perfectly fulfils [sic] its declared goal as a sincere and fully engaged book on the Goddess for a wider readership and it presents charming keys to understand Euro-American intellectual history from the original point of view of the author’s Hindu-Buddhist ethos.
— Rivista degli Studi Orientali
While this book joins an established tradition of feminist theological critique, and efforts at reclaiming suppressed aspects of the feminine in Judeo-Christian androcentric dualist thought, Saxena’s unique perspective as a Hindu/Buddhist Kali-loving Indian woman, to use her own words, and her grounding in an overtly gynocentric tradition, make for a valuable contribution to this field.
— Reading Religion
[Absent Mother God of the West] became a window into her scholarship and spiritual practice that fueled my desire to read the works she references and visit the places she does.... [T]he book takes one on a complex journey between faiths and philosophies, physical places and the Divine Feminine in her multitudinous forms.
— Patheos
Saxena uncovers layers of philosophical, cultural, and gendered suppressions of the female god to reveal a vibrant layer of the Mother God in the western world. Needless to say, this journey that is not merely a philosophical quest, but one that emerges out of a soul connection to the Divine Feminine, manifests into this beautiful book, Absent Mother God of the West…. [W]e are invited to participate in a pilgrimage that is described in limpid prose…. Saxena is gifted in being able to bring a wealth of diverse philosophical ideas in easy conversation with each other. This book is one that we can dip into again and again and find our intellectual, creative and spiritual faculties sharpened.
— Setu
Saxena takes readers on a far-ranging pilgrimage, a communal search party for the goddess. Deeply poetic and philosophical, her interdisciplinarity opens up new vistas, as it makes surprising connections amongst continental thought, esoteric religion, ecofeminist religion, and postcolonial thought.
— Journal of Hindu-Christian Studies
It is not often that a non-Western person deeply anchored in her own tradition trains her gaze onto the Western world. In this case the gazer is a Bengali woman scholar, Neela Bhattacharya Saxena, a self-described Kali lover, widely read and a widely traveled pilgrim delightfully free of narrow disciplinary boundaries.
— Worldviews: Global Religions, Culture and Ecology
This book is the work of a deeply self-aware Bengali Vajrayani woman devotee of Kali, Neela Saxena. In a voice that is warm and compassionate but with adamantine clarity, it offers us a stunningly enlightening and moving reversal of the gaze on western modernity and its religious roots, discovering there an underground and suppressed presence of the Mother God. It is saturated with sophisticated and complex readings of a wide gamut of feminist and other writings. Absent Mother God of the West is both profound and a delightful read, exemplifying in its style the non-duality of samsara and nirvana, of transcendence and immanence. It effortlessly blends personal experience, philosophy, science, and popular culture, delivering to the reader a hope-filled alternative to the androcentrism and colonizing ethos of western modernity, offering the possibility to transform its ‘dueling dualisms’ into what Saxena calls ‘dancing dualities.’
— Frédérique Apffel-Marglin, Smith College, author of Subversive Spiritualities: How Rituals Enact the World
This work is a bold and stimulating study on the contested history of the divine feminine in the west. In her journey across continents, Saxena has endeavored to restore one of the most fascinating figures of the feminine archetype in her several incarnations and cultural contexts, whether as the marginalized figure of the Virgin Mary in Christianity, or the mysterious and sublime persona of Shekhinah in Judaism, or the all-pervasive ‘global Mother Kali’ in Hinduism. The book makes a very significant contribution to gender studies and religious history across civilizations, and it will be an eye opener to the modern scholars and seekers of goddess spirituality.
— Madhu Khanna, Centre for Comparative Religions and Civilizations, Jamia Millia Islamia
In this impressively wide-ranging volume, Neela Saxena takes her readers on a journey across cultures to encounter the figure of the Divine Mother. This journey is intensely personal, while at the same time grounded in historical knowledge that is characterized by both depth and breadth. Building on her earlier work on the Hindu Goddess Kali, Saxena deftly handles materials from as far afield as Japan and ancient Greece to create a portrait of a Mother Goddess honored in a wide array of forms and manifestations around the world. Many have argued that our alienation from this Divine Mother in the West has been at the root of an array of cultural maladies on many levels, from the individual to the global. Saxena, however, concludes on a note of hope, and shows us that the absent Mother God of the West is perhaps not so absent after all.
— Jeffery D. Long
This is an ambitious book, woven through with diverse currents from literature, philosophy and interreligious theology. A self-identified Hindu-Buddhist and a professor of English and women's studies, Saxena takes readers on a far-ranging pilgrimage, a communal search party for the goddess. Deeply poetic and philosophical her interdisciplinarity opens up new vistas, as it makes surprising connections amongst continental thought, esoteric religion, ecofeminist religion, and postcolonial thought, just to name a few of Saxena's scholarly interests.
— Journal of Hindu-Christian Studies