The Bhakti Movement played a crucial role in the formation of Indian culture and consciousness. As a movement, it began in 7th century in South India, especially in Tamil Nadu and Kerala, but attained its prime in North India, especially in Hindi speaking belt, in 15th and 17th centuries, shifting spiritual experience from being an institutionally regulated affair to a highly personal and socially inclusive. Historians have mainly studied this movement as a religious movement but recent approaches postulate that it was a kind of activism that went against the established power hierarchy, caste hierarchy, ritual orthodoxy, and social exclusion. The Bhakti saints, whether they belong to south or north India, played a critical role in utilizing cultural resources, vernacular literature, and devotional poetry, music, discourse, and so on to change social consciousness and make spiritual knowledge widely available. The saints of this movement heralded metamorphosis, challenging the dominant norms of the day and creating alternate spaces of expression. The current research paper studies the Bhakti Movement in India, through an analysis of its historical context, ideological foundations, literary practices, and social impact as an early instance of cultural activism. According to the text’s analysis, it proved to be radical cultural agent who employed language, poetry, performance as well as spirituality in the cultural phenomena of the country. An analysis of key Bhakti saints Kabir, Ravidas, Mirabai, Guru Nanak, and Tukaram shows that such devotional expression can be viewed as a medium of resistance, inclusivity, and cultural democratization. Additionally, an analysis of the movement is performed in terms of pluralism, social justice, and the contemporary debates on cultural activism.
Kumar et al. (Tue,) studied this question.