Mainstream narratives about yoga in the U.S. often describe how the practice promotes physical and spiritual wellbeing. But, yoga practitioners and scholars rarely question who has had access to the practice since its arrival in North America, and thereby its purportedly healing and liberatory properties. Relatedly, they fail to critically interrogate the representation of the prototypical yogi in contemporary America: upper and middle-class white persons, particularly white women.
Race and Yoga is the first scholarly journal to examine issues surrounding the history, racialization, sex(ualization), and inclusivity (or lack thereof) of the yoga community.
Current Issue, Volume 7, Issue 1, 2023
Open Issue
Introduction
Reigniting Race and Yoga: An Open Issue “in the Wake” of Ongoing Crises
Roth, Sammy
Articles
"You are Your Best Thing": The Barriers and Benefits of Yoga for Black Women
Oatis-Ballew, Robin; Hotz, Allison; Chaney-Taylor, Tiyana; Elizabetta-Ragan, Sarah Rose
Queer and Trans Yoga: Practices of Utopia in Hostile Times
Diamond-Lenow, Chloe
“Roll Out My Mat and Take Up Space”: A Study of Black Women’s Resistance to Yoga’s White Normativity
Justin, Tori Alexis
Personal Narratives
Rediscovering Citta: Vignettes on Violence and Healing in Life and Commercial Yoga Spaces
Cumberbatch, Brett Lesley
Book Reviews
Book Review: Freedom Inside? Yoga and Meditation in the Carceral State
Kheradyar, Ali
Book Review: Practicing Yoga as Resistance: Voices of Color in Search of Freedom
Griggs, Samantha
Book Review: Routledge Handbook of Yoga and Meditation Studies
Kalyanasundaram, Sandhiya