Urban is the son of a psychologist and Pennsylvania State University professor and was brought up in a devout Episcopal family. He is married to Nancy Jesser, who also teaches in the Department of Comparative Studies at Ohio State University.[1] They have one child.[2][3]
Academic research
Urban's academic focus began with the religions of India[4] and expanded to his studies of new religious movements in both the United States and Europe, about which he has written many academic books and articles.[2] He has said that the knowledge and power used by religions to keep information hidden from others had always fascinated him.[3]
Rachel Aviv of the London Review of Books said that Urban's book "chronicles the way [Church of Scientology founder L. Ron] Hubbard] reacted to legal and political challenges to his authority by attempting (largely successfully) to conceal his theories from the public."[8]
Kirkus Reviews called the book "a fascinating and oftentimes mind-bending account of how penny-a-word sci-fi writer L. Ron Hubbard doggedly pursued the religion angle in his quest to create the worldwide Church of Scientology."[8]
Urban also observed that Hubbard formed many of his theories from those previously written about by the early to mid 20th century astral projection pioneer Sylvan Muldoon[9] in his (Muldoon's) 1951 book The Phenomena of Astral Projection[10] co-written with Hereward Carrington.
Bibliography
Songs of Ecstasy: Tantric and Devotional Songs from Bengal (2001) (New York: Oxford University Press)[2]
The Economics of Ecstasy: Tantra, Secrecy and Power in Colonial Bengal (2001) (New York: Oxford University Press)[2]
Tantra: Sex, Secrecy, Politics and Power in the Study of Religion (2003) (University of California Press)[2]
Magia Sexualis: Sex, Magic and Liberation in Modern Western Esotericism (2006) (University of California Press)[2]
The Secrets of the Kingdom: Religion and Concealment in the Bush Administration (2007) (Rowman & Littlefield)[2]
The Power of Tantra: Religion, Sexuality and the Politics of South Asian Studies (2009) (I.B. Tauris/ Palgrave MacMillan)[2]