Licence and faithfulness: Taking liberties with kathā in classical Sanskrit poetry and aesthetics
This article concerns techniques whereby poets of classical Sanskrit literature (kāvya) interacted with their story materials (kathās), and conceptions in medieval Indian poetics (alaṃkāraśāstra) concerning their interaction. Taking ample poetic liberties enabled poets (kavis) of this tradition to a...
Autor principal: | Sarkar, B |
---|---|
Formato: | Journal article |
Publicado em: |
Association for the Study of the History of Indian Thought
2016
|
Registros relacionados
-
Katha Upaniṣad
por: Daniel de Palma
Publicado em: (1995-05-01) -
Monobider Moner Katha
por: Gautam Kr. Bandyopadhyay
Publicado em: (2017-12-01) -
Food and Love in Sanskrit Poetry: On the Margin of Desires
por: Danielle Feller
Publicado em: (2019-12-01) -
‘Sanskrit-Speaking’ Villages, Faith-Based Development and the Indian Census
por: McCartney, Patrick S.D.
Publicado em: (2022-04-01) -
The Metaphor of Boundary Crossing in Classical Sanskrit Literature
por: Anna Trynkowska
Publicado em: (2019-12-01)