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The Modernity of Sanskrit by Simona Sawhney

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The Modernity of Sanskrit

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Simona Sawhney

University of Minnesota Press · Ebook · December 11, 2008

Reading lane: Indic Literary Criticism

A convincing argument for the modern significance of Sanskrit literature Sanskrit texts have usually been discussed either within the frames of anthropology and religious studies or with a veneration that has substituted for analysis.

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At a Glance

Who It's For

Reading lane: Indic Literary Criticism and Hindu History.Publisher: University of Minnesota Press.

Book Details

Authors
Simona Sawhney
Publisher
University of Minnesota Press
Published
December 11, 2008
Format
Ebook
Theme
Indic Literary Criticism · Hindu History
Reading lane
Indic Literary Criticism

Affinity

Publisher Categories

  • Indian & South Asian History

  • Indic Literary Criticism

About This Book

A convincing argument for the modern significance of Sanskrit literature Sanskrit texts have usually been discussed either within the frames of anthropology and religious studies or with a veneration that has substituted for analysis. Going beyond such approaches, Simona Sawhney argues that only a literary approach that resists the closure of interpretation can reveal the fragility, ambivalence, and tension that mark the canonical texts. Today we witness, Sawhney contends, t...

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A convincing argument for the modern significance of Sanskrit literature Sanskrit texts have usually been discussed either within the frames of anthropology and religious studies or with a veneration that has substituted for analysis. Going beyond such approaches, Simona Sawhney argues that only a literary approach that resists the closure of interpretation can reveal the fragility, ambivalence, and tension that mark the canonical texts. Today we witness, Sawhney contends, the near-total appropriation of Sanskrit literature by Hindu nationalism. The Modernity of Sanskrit challenges this appropriation by exploring the complex work of Rabindranath Tagore, M. K. Gandhi, and Mohan Rakesh. Sawhney proposes that Indian nationalist writings about classic Sanskrit became a charged site for postcolonial reflections on politics and art in India. Sawhney claims that although new readings of Sanskrit literature played a decisive role in the intellectual conception of modernity in India, the space for such readings has steadily shrunk in contemporary times, leading to a stark diminishment of both the political and the literary lives of the texts.

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