Columbia University Press
A Rasa Reader
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Reviews
In this bold, comprehensive, and bracing foray into classical India, Pollock confirms his reputation as a pioneering intellectual historian—the rare kind that creates a vast new field of inquiry and scholarship while provoking reappraisals of existing ideas, assumptions, and concepts.
Haun Saussy, University of Chicago:
Pollock recounts the core aesthetic concept of rasa by tracking its transformations, extensions, and exclusions. From its early appearance as a term specific to drama to its flowering as a hybrid concept bringing together emotion, eroticism, cuisine, devotion, authenticity, and response, rasa makes sense of aesthetic experiences but in a way that doesn't and shouldn't reduce to any of its near-equivalents in Greek or German philosophies of the beautiful. Comparative literature gains immensely from this detailed, historically differentiated anthology with its illuminating introduction.
David Damrosch, Harvard University:
Framed by Sheldon Pollock's magisterial introduction and commentary, A Rasa Reader opens out a panoramic view of one of the world's great aesthetic traditions, whose adherents blend philosophical rigor and poetic insight as they advance, dispute, and refine theories of the nature and effects of artistic expression. Discerning readers of this luminous anthology will 'become intoxicated by it'—as the great poet-critic Dandin said of poetry—'like bees by honey.'
Stephen Owen, Harvard University:
A Rasa Reader is a monumental achievement not only in giving clear translations of difficult Sanskrit texts on aesthetics but also in making complicated arguments comprehensible to the general reader. It is the missing cornerstone in the increasing availability of premodern South Asia literature in reliable translation. It is now possible for the curious reader to find his or her way with some depth into a once impenetrable field.
Lawrence McCrea, Cornell University:
A Rasa Reader marks a serious contribution to scholarship on rasa and promises to shape the field for a long time to come. There is certainly no one work in English or any other language that covers anything like the ground this one does.
Robert Goldman, University of California, Berkeley:
A Rasa Reader is the product of enormous erudition in both the Indian and European traditions of the philosophy and science of aesthetics, and it will make a unique and powerful contribution to scholars in several areas. No other work of which I am aware enables even the lay reader to grasp the elusive concept of rasa, its relationship to the psychology of emotion, and the way in which successive authors redefined the meaning and locus of the aesthetic response.
Topics
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Frontmatter
i -
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Contents
vii -
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Preface
xi -
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Acknowledgments
xix -
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English Translations of Sanskrit Titles, with Approximate Dates
xxi -
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Abbreviations
xxiii -
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Introduction
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CHAPTER ONE. The Foundational Text, c. 300, and Early Theorists, 650-1025
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CHAPTER TWO. The Great Synthesis of Bhoja, 1025-1055
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CHAPTER THREE. An Aesthetics Revolution, 900- 1000
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CHAPTER FOUR. Abhinavagupta and His School, 1000-1200
181 -
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CHAPTER FIVE. Continuing the Controversies Beyond Kashmir, 1200- 1400
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CHAPTER SIX. Rasa in the Early Modern World, 1200- 1650
276 -
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English-Sanskrit Glossary
327 -
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Notes
333 -
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Bibliography
421 -
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Index
431