Writing a more "Saṃskṛta" India: Religion, culture, and politics in V. Raghavan's twentieth-century Sanskrit literature /

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Preston, Charles Scott, author.
Imprint:2016.
Ann Arbor : ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, 2016
Description:1 electronic resource (381 pages)
Language:English
Format: E-Resource Dissertations
Local Note:School code: 0330
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/10862916
Hidden Bibliographic Details
Other authors / contributors:University of Chicago. degree granting institution.
ISBN:9781339874432
Notes:Advisors: Wendy Doniger Committee members: Yigal Bronner; Paula Richmond.
This item is not available from ProQuest Dissertations & Theses.
Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 77-10(E), Section: A.
English
Summary:This dissertation provides an analysis of the original twentieth-century Sanskrit dramas and poems of V. Raghavan (1908-1979) and examines these texts as evidence for the development of ideas of religion and culture, changes in Sanskrit aesthetics, and notions of nationalist language and cultural politics in colonial and postcolonial India. The analysis asks the fundamental question of what writing in Sanskrit in the twentieth century might have meant and focuses on how Raghavan's literary works draw on traditional Sanskrit precedents to address modern cultural and religious politics. It investigates how he attempts to fuse the aesthetic and religious in defiance of the religious-secular binary, and how he tries to revive Sanskrit culture. Significant attention is also paid to scrutinizing the author's messages of religious tolerance as informed by Euro-American understandings of the category of religion. The dissertation considers these modern Sanskrit works as attempting to foster Sanskrit nationalism and a Hindu cultural resurgence within the contours of the postcolonial Indian political sphere. Consideration is also given to what writing in Sanskrit meant for the author as a creative exercise and as a matter of belonging, navigating between tradition and modernity. The study highlights how a modern religious author and thinker recycles the language, literature, and categories of the past to engage creatively with the political realities and intellectual movements of the present.