A Political History of Literature : Vidyapati and the fifteenth century / Pankaj Jha

By: Jha, PankajContributor(s): Jha, PankajMaterial type: TextTextPublisher number: :Brijwasi Book Distributors | :H-87, Lalita Park laxmi Nagar Delhi 110092Publication details: New Delhi : Oxford University Press, 2019Description: xviii,271p. 24cmISBN: 9780199489558Subject(s): Literatures | East Indo-European & Celtic literatures | Vidyāpati Ṭhākura, -- active 15th century -- Criticism and interpretation | India -- History -- 1000-1526 | India -- In literature | Vidyāpati Ṭhākura, -- active 15th century | LiteratureDDC classification: 891.21 JHA
Contents:
List of ImagesList of TablesNotes on Transliteration Preface AcknowledgementsIntroduction Part I: Contexts 1. Vidyapati and Mithila 2. The Literary and the Political in the Fifteenth Century Part II: Texts 3. Writing State and Order 4. Political Ethics or the Art of Being a Man 5. Entangled Vines of Glory: Kirttilata and Its Many Worlds Conclusion Bibliography IndexAbout the Author
Summary: This title studies the 15th-century north India through an intimate exploration of three compositions of the poet-scholar, Vidyapati: a Sanskrit treatise on writing, a celebratory biography in Apabhramsa, and a collection of mytho-historical tales in Sanskrit. An intimate linguistic, literary, and historical study of these texts reveals a world that is marked by a range of ideas, expertise, literary tropes, ethical regimes and historical consciousness drawn eclectically from sources that we are used to thinking of as belonging to 'diverse' politico-cultural traditions. Vidyapati laced these ideas with contemporary flavour, classicising impulse and useable forms. He was not alone in doing so. As the book shows, many of the ideals extolled in 15th-century literary cultures appear to be those more appropriate for ambitious and expansive political formations associated with an imperial state
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List of ImagesList of TablesNotes on Transliteration Preface AcknowledgementsIntroduction Part I: Contexts 1. Vidyapati and Mithila 2. The Literary and the Political in the Fifteenth Century Part II: Texts 3. Writing State and Order 4. Political Ethics or the Art of Being a Man 5. Entangled Vines of Glory: Kirttilata and Its Many Worlds Conclusion Bibliography IndexAbout the Author

This title studies the 15th-century north India through an intimate exploration of three compositions of the poet-scholar, Vidyapati: a Sanskrit treatise on writing, a celebratory biography in Apabhramsa, and a collection of mytho-historical tales in Sanskrit. An intimate linguistic, literary, and historical study of these texts reveals a world that is marked by a range of ideas, expertise, literary tropes, ethical regimes and historical consciousness drawn eclectically from sources that we are used to thinking of as belonging to 'diverse' politico-cultural traditions. Vidyapati laced these ideas with contemporary flavour, classicising impulse and useable forms. He was not alone in doing so. As the book shows, many of the ideals extolled in 15th-century literary cultures appear to be those more appropriate for ambitious and expansive political formations associated with an imperial state

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