1 | NĀTYAŚĀSTRA AND BHĀSA | 01-06 |
Author(s): Prof. Radhavallabh Tripathi |
Abstract NÄá¹yaÅ›Ästra (NS) of Bharatamuni is one of the most voluminous and comprehensive texts on the art of theatre, drama and dramaturgy compiled around the 2nd century BC. There is hardly any author in the galaxy of classical Sanskrit playwrights who has not been influenced in some way or other by overpowering impact of this magnum opus; mostly the playwrights in Sanskrit eagerly confirm to the dicta of the NS. BhÄsa, however, is an exception. Citation By: DOP: 25-03-2018 |
2 | Åšiva in Sanskrit Literature | 7-12 |
Author(s): Prof. Radhavallabh Tripathi |
Abstract Åšiva is a unique deity in Hindu pantheon. He is imbued with a variety of opposite qualities, he terrific and re-assuring, repulsive and beautiful, wrathful and easy to please, a celibate and an epicure. He is an ascetic and fell under the charm of PÄrvatÄ« – the mountain girl. He is ubiquitous and he lives in the burial grounds. He burnt KÄma – the god of love and also he remains ever united with his beloved UmÄ in the form of ArdhanÄrÄ«Å›vara. The Wonderful thing about Åšiva is that he loves human beings like a father. He laughs at their follies. An arrogant RÄvaṇa raised the KailÄsa Mountain to challenge him. The mountain started shaking and the terrified UmÄ, Åšiva’s consort, hugged Him out of fear. This pleased Åšiva. But when the mountain was actual raised by the defiant RÄvaṇa above the ground and its shakings became rather inconvenient, Åšiva just pressed it with his thumb and the RÄvaṇa was crushed under its pressure. But then Åšiva was pleased with his shrieks and became his mentor. Citation By: DOP: 25-03-2018 |
3 | Impact of GÄ«tÄ on Modern Sanskrit Writings | 13-17 |
Author(s): Prof. Radhavallabh Tripathi |
Abstract PanditÄ KÅŸamÄ Devi Rao (1890-1954) is one of the most celebrated authors of Sanskrit in 20th century. Her father Shankar Pandurang Pundit had been a renowned Sanskrit scholar. KÅŸamÄ Rao inherited the love for Sanskrit from her legendary father, and she was drawn to modernity and Europe through her husband, Raghavendra Rao, who was not only one of the most flourishing medical practitioners in Mumbai at that time, he was the first Indian doctor to have earned the degrees of M.D. and D.Sc. from London. Citation By: DOP: 25-03-2018 |
4 | Adhivedana – The Ancient Indian Practice of Divorce | 18-23 |
Author(s): Prof. Radhavallabh Tripathi |
Citation By: DOP: 25-03-2018 |
5 | Performance of LÄ«lÄ, RÄmalÄ«lÄ and Sanskrit Theatre | 24-32 |
Author(s): Prof. Radhavallabh Tripathi |
Abstract In this paper I propose to investigate upon the concept and performance of LÄ«lÄ as evinced through the NÄá¹yá¹¥Ästra (NS) of Bharatamuni and the interrealtionships of RÄmalÄ«lÄ with Sanskrit theatre. The NÄá¹yaá¹¥Ästra presents three views of LÄ«lÄ, viz.: – (i) a cosmic creative process recurring through anuká¹›ti on theatre which correlates to LÄ«lÄ as a form of theatre. (ii) LÄ«lÄ as a fundamental aesthetic concept out of which various categories of performance in correspondance to the actual practice of LÄ«lÄ evolved; (iii) a typical genre of performance described in the NS which formed the basis for lÄ«lÄ theatre. Citation By: DOP: 25-03-2018 |
6 | Concept of Time and History in Sanskrit Literature | 33-35 |
Author(s): Prof. Radhavallabh Tripathi |
Abstract Sanskrit is one of the great repositories Indian traditions. Sanskrit literature not only records the ideas of ancient Indian philosophers and historians on the concepts of time and space, it is also an invaluable source for history. The earliest elaboration of Time (KÄla) as an ontological category occurs in the Atharvaveda. The concept of time is elaborated upon in two of hymns in this Veda (Atharvaveda, IXX.54 and IXX.55). At the very out set of the first hymn, the seer views Time as a Mighty Horse running with immense speed, with seven reigns and seven wheels. Time here is viewed as an Ultimate with the eternal flow, in which everything is finally subsumed. ‘He is the Horse but He is the Rider’ the seer says- ‘only poets (kavayaḥ) and scholars (vipaÅ›citaḥ) can ride over Him.’ All the worlds (bhuvanÄni/ viÅ›vÄ) are His wheels. He is the substratum and the substrata. The worlds are his off-shoots, and then he is an off-shoot of these worlds. Therefore, He is the father and the son as well. He pervades all phenomenons and yet he also transcends it and stands out of it. Citation By: DOP: 25-03-2018 |
7 | AbhijnÄnaÅ›Äkuntalam on Modern Stage | 36-41 |
Author(s): Prof. Radhavallabh Tripathi |
Citation By: DOP: 25-03-2018 |
8 | Reconstructing AbhirÄmamaṇi – A Lost Sanskrit play | 42-44 |
Author(s): Prof. Radhavallabh Tripathi |
Abstract AbhirÄmamaṇi, a play on RÄmÄyaṇa– theme, is one of the lost treasures of Sanskrit literature. The author of this play, SundaramiÅ›ra, flourished in sixteenth-seventeenth century. Besides the AbhirÄmamaṇi, he had also written NÄá¹yapradÄ«pa, a text on dramaturgy. SundaramiÅ›ra must have composed his play before he started writing his dramaturgical work, as he profusely refers to the play in it. Dr. V. Raghavan in his "Some Lost Rama Plays" does not refer to this lost RÄma-play. Citation By: DOP: 25-03-2018 |
9 | Alaá¹kÄras in the Stotras of Utpaladeva | 45-48 |
Author(s): Prof. Radhavallabh Tripathi |
Citation By: DOP: 25-03-2018 |