Love in Sanskrit and Tamil Literature: A Study of Characters and Nature (200 B.C.-A.D.500)
Love in Sanskrit and Tamil Literature: A Study of Characters and Nature (200 B.C.-A.D.500) - Paperback is backordered and will ship as soon as it is back in stock.
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Binding : Paperback
Pages : 344
Edition : 1st
Size : 5.5" x 8.5"
Condition : New
Language : English
Weight : 0.0-0.5 kg
Publication Year: 1994
Country of Origin : India
Territorial Rights : Worldwide
Reading Age : 13 years and up
HSN Code : 49011010 (Printed Books)
Publisher : Motilal Banarsidass Publishing House
This book compares and contrasts the characters and Mother Nature. depicted by the poets and dramatists in the treatment of love in Sanskrit and Tamil literature.
While both these literatures accept the hero and the heroine as the main characters in the drama of love, others like the harlot who contributes to the "love triangle" the friends of the hero and the heroine as well as their relatives, dependants and a number of other people have their own role in providing the cultural and social restrictions or encouragement that develops the emotion fully. The influence of landscape and the seasons on lovers and the use of imagery and alamkara to convey emotion in a manner culturally acceptable are also examined.
Looking at Sanskrit and Tamil literature composed between 200 B.C. and 500 A.D. this book identifies areas of inherent similarities and mutual influence between two of the literatures of India.
About The Author
Associate Professor DR. (MRS.) DEVAPOOPATHY NADARAJAH has been on the academic staff of the Department of Indian Studies, University of Malaya since 1966 after a short stint as a school teacher. A Malaysian, born and bred in Malaysia, she is fluent in Tamil, English and Bahasa Malaysia. She lectures courses related to Indian culture and tradition, Tamil literature and Sanskrit language and literature.
Her knowledge of Tamil and Sanskrit has been the source of many research articles in comparative Indian literature like "Some Tamil Literary Conventions Found in Kalidasa's Meghadūtam", "Käman in Classical Tamil Literature" and "Some Marutam
Poems", to mention a few. Actively involved in some of the leading Shaivite institutions in her she has been awarded the title of "Śaiva Siddhanta Kalanithi" by the Guru Manasannidhāna of Dharmapuram, Tamil Nadu.