Session 10 of the 2007 Shivdasani Conference.
Lectures on Temple and Text
The Style and Aesthetics of Indian Erotic Temple Sculpture
Related: Aesthetics, Temple and Text
Yajna and Puja: A Comparison of the Ritual Archetypes
Session 8 of the 2007 Shivdasani Conference.
Related: Ritual, Temple and Text
The Indian Temple: Production, Place, Patronage
Session 11 of the 2007 Shivdasani Conference.
Related: Temple and Text
Creating Religious Identity: The Archaeology of Early Temples in the Malaprabha Valley
Session 2 of the 2007 Shivdasani Conference.
Related: Temple and Text
Sacred Space and the Making of Monuments in Colonial Orissa
Session 7 of the 2007 Shivdasani Conference.
Related: Temple and Text
Money of the Gods: The Religious Tokens of India
Session 6 of the 2007 Shivdasani Conference.
Related: Numismatics, Temple and Text
Textual Tradition and the Temples of Khajuraho
Session 9 of the 2007 Shivdasani Conference.
Related: Temple and Text
The Social Impact of Hindu Temples in East Bengal under the Mughals
Session 5 of the 2007 Shivdasani Conference.
Related: Temple and Text
The Ambika Temple at Jagat: A Biographical Sketch
Session 5 of the 2007 Shivdasani Conference.
Related: Temple and Text
Temple Sponsorship and Money Use in Early Medieval Deccan
Session 3 of the 2007 Shivdasani Conference.
Related: Numismatics, Temple and Text
Welcome Address
Session 1 of the 2007 Shivdasani Conference.
Related: Temple and Text
The Ritual Culture Of Temples And Icons in Jainism
Session 15 of the 2007 Shivdasani Conference.
As part of his mendicant vows, a Jain monk is committed to total non-possession.* He owns nothing. He is dependent upon the laity for even his robes , bowls, staff, and other ritual insignia and paraphernalia. These are, so to speak, "loaned" to him by the laity. In theory he should not ask even for these, and if the laity choose not to provide them, he should do without.
Related: Jainism, Temple and Text
The Temple in Sanskrit Legal Literature
Session 12 of the 2007 Shivdasani Conference.
Related: Dharmasastra, Temple and Text
Absence and Presence: Worshipping the Jina at Ellora
How does one worship a liberated being who is technically inaccessible? This is the fundamental question that I propose to answer within the context of Ellora’s Jain cave-temples. In the early ninth through tenth century, temples with shrines containing a life-sized Jina image were hewn out of rock. Among the earliest of these temples is a monument known today as the Chota Kailasa. As its appellation suggests, this temple resembles the site’s larger and more famous Kailasanatha temple in terms of its execution, architectural components, and designation of sacred space. Although Ellora’s Kailasanatha temple has long been recognized as a divine residence for the Hindu god Shiva, similar ways of looking at the Chota Kailasa and its Jina image have not yet been conducted. One reason for this neglect may be the simple fact that the liberated Jina is not considered to be “present” within the main shrine image and so the temple is not thought of as a “residence” per se. Though this is technically the case, similarities between these two monuments at Ellora, especially in some of their external imagery, suggest more nuanced connections.
Related: Jainism, Temple and Text
Sastra and Prayoga: Building Bridges Between Text and Performance in the Sanskritic Tradition
Session 21 of the 2007 Shivdasani Conference.
While the general interest of this symposium lies in the relationships between temples, architecture, texts and performance, my presentation focuses on the relation between the formal description and analysis of dance and its practice. My discussion draws exclusively upon the primary source material for our knowledge of the performing arts of India, that is, the extensive body of Sanskrit texts on dance, drama and music.
Related: Dance, Temple and Text
Colonial Modernity, Memory and the Devadasi Dance Tradition of the Viralmalai Murukan Temple
Session 20 of the 2007 Shivdasani Conference
Related: Dance, Temple and Text
Hindu Samnyasins in the Temple Context
Session 13 of the 2007 Shivdasani Conference
The Hindu temple is a religious site and signifies some ritual activity. The general perception of a samnyasin, on the other hand, is one not associated with ritual activity as that is seen as perpetuating worldly existence or samsara. However since this polarization is not evidenced in real life this is indeed a contested issue and this paper examines how far this relationship of a renouncer with the temples as seen in the world can be justified based on the prescriptions given in ascetic (samnyasa) manuals like the Samnyasa Upanishads, the Yatidharmasamuccaya and Jivanmuktiviveka.
Related: Asceticism, Temple and Text
Seeing the Bhakti Movement
Session 14 of the 2007 Shivdasani Conference.
Related: Bhakti, Temple and Text
Performing Konarak, Performing Hirapur
Session 19 of the 2007 Shivdasani Conference.
Related: Temple and Text
Temple Texts and Cultural Performances in South Asia
Session 18 of the 2007 Shivdasani Conference
Related: Dance, Temple and Text
The Dance Performed by the Temple: the Dynamics of Hindu Temple Architecture
Session 17 of the 2007 Shivdasani Conference.
In the forms of shrine, which developed between the 7th and 13th centuries, Hindu temples, conceived as divine bodies, embodied structured patterns of movement in their architectural compositions. Shrines are invested with a sense of centrifugal dynamism that appears to originate at the tip of the finial, or a point just above it, progressing downwards from this point and outwards from the vertical axis. Compositional elements are made to appear to multiply, to emerge and expand out from the body of the shrine, and out from one another, as interpenetrating elements differentiate themselves and come apart. As well as a spatial structure, a temple has a temporal one, of which a given spatial arrangement is a momentary glimpse, or rather, a succession of such glimpses. A series of elements, or of configurations of elements, can be sensed not so much as a chain of separate entities, but as the same thing seen several times, at different stages, evolving and proliferating. This pattern of growth is conveyed through clearly identifiable architectural means.
Related: Dance, Temple and Text
Telling the World: Exploring the Cultural and Intellectual Agenda of the Sanskrit Mahabharata
In this lecture, I explore the form and function of the Sanskrit Mahabharata. I take up features of its design, its explicit statements about itself and its most prominent themes in order to make some suggestions as to what the Mahabharata sought to do, culturally and intellectually,in early South Asian society. I combine this with an analysis of the presence of the Mahabharata in select literary and epigraphical sources of the first millennium in order to explore the impact of the text from Guptan north India to Kerala and Kashmir. These investigations will be combined with a broader discussion of the role of narrative in the transmission and adaptation of understandings of past, place and preferred ideology within, and potentially beyond, South Asia.
Dr James Hegarty is Senior Lecturer in Indian Religions at Cardiff University. His primary research interest is in the role of religious narrative in the cultural and intellectual history of South Asia. He has published numerous papers on Sanskrit and vernacular narrative materials. His monograph Religion, Narrative and Public Imagination: Past and Place in the Sanskrit Mahabharata is forthcoming with Routledge.
Related: Numismatics, Temple and Text