- Title Pages
- Introduction Foreword into the Past
- A Chronology of Hinduism
- Hinduism by any Other Name<sup>1</sup>
- Are Hindus Monotheists or Polytheists?<sup>1</sup>
- Three (or more) Forms of the Three (or more)–Fold Path in Hinduism<sup>1</sup>
- The Concept of Heresy in Hinduism<sup>1</sup>
- Eating Karma<sup>1</sup>
- Medical and Mythical Constructions of the Body in Sanskrit Texts<sup>1</sup>
- Death and Rebirthin Hinduism<sup>1</sup>
- Forgetting and Re-Awakening to Incarnation<sup>1</sup>
- Assume the Position: The Fight Over the Body of Yoga<sup>1</sup>
- The Toleration of Intolerance in Hinduism<sup>1</sup>
- The Politics of Hinduism Tomorrow<sup>1</sup>
- <i>Saguna</i> and <i>Nirguna</i> Images of the Deity<sup>1</sup>
- You can'T get here from there: The Logical Paradox of Hindu Creation Myths<sup>1</sup>
- Together Apart: Changing Ethical Implications of Hindu Cosmologies<sup>1</sup>
- God's Body, or, the <i>Lingam</i> made Flesh: Conflicts Over the Representation of Shiva<sup>1</sup>
- Sacrifice and Substitution: Ritual Mystification and Mythical Demystification in Hinduism<sup>1</sup>
- The Scrapbook of Undeserved Salvation: The <i>Kedara Khanda</i> of the <i>Skanda Purana</i> <sup>1</sup>
- Why should a Brahmin tell you Whom to Marry?: A Deconstruction of <i>the Laws of Manu</i> <sup>1</sup>
- Saranyu/Samjna: The Sun and the Shadow<sup>1</sup>
- The Clever Wife in Indian Mythology<sup>1</sup>
- Rings of Rejection and Recognition in Ancient India<sup>1</sup>
- The Third Nature : Gender Inversions in the <i>Kamasutra</i> <sup>1</sup>
- Bisexuality and Transsexuality among the Hindu Gods<sup>1</sup>
- Transsexual Transformations of Subjectivity and Memory in Hindu Mythology<sup>1</sup>
- The Control of Addiction in Ancient India<sup>1</sup>
- Reading the <i>Kamasutra</i>: It Isn't all about Sex<sup>1</sup>
- The Mythology of the <i>Kamasutra</i> <sup>1</sup>
- From Kama to Karma: The Resurgence of Puritanism in Contemporary India<sup>1</sup>
- The Ambivalence of Ahimsa<sup>1</sup>
- Zoomorphism in Ancient India: Humans More Bestial than the Beasts<sup>1</sup>
- The Mythology of Horses in India<sup>1</sup>
- The Submarine Mare in the Mythology of Shiva<sup>1</sup>
- Indra as the Stallion's Wife<sup>1</sup>
- Dogs as Dalits in Indian Literature<sup>1</sup>
- Sacred Cows and Beefeaters<sup>1</sup>
- Impermanence and Eternity in Hindu Epic, Art and Performance<sup>1</sup>
- Shadows of the <i>Ramayana</i> <sup>1</sup>
- Women in the <i>Mahabharata</i> <sup>1</sup>
- The History of Ekalavya<sup>1</sup>
- ‘I Have Scinde’: Orientalism and Guilt<sup>1</sup>
- Doniger O'flaherty on Doniger
- You Can't Make an Omelette<sup>1</sup>
- The Forest-Dweller<sup>1</sup>
- Appendix I Limericks on Hinduism
- APPENDIX II ESSAYS ON HINDUISM BY WENDY DONIGER
- List of Abbreviations
- Bibliography
- Index
Impermanence and Eternity in Hindu Epic, Art and Performance 1
Impermanence and Eternity in Hindu Epic, Art and Performance 1
- Chapter:
- (p.508) (p.509) Impermanence and Eternity in Hindu Epic, Art and Performance1
- Source:
- On Hinduism
- Author(s):
Wendy Doniger
- Publisher:
- Oxford University Press
This chapter examines permanence, impermanence, and eternity in Hindu epic, art and performance. It begins with an overview of Sanskrit classics such as the Rig Veda and the Mahabharata, as well as the distinction between oral and written texts. It then considers the Hindus’ awareness of the relationship between shruti (the Vedic canon), “that which is heard,” and smriti (the later dharma traditions), “that which is remembered.”
Keywords: permanence, impermanence, epic, art, performance, Sanskrit classics, Rig Veda, Mahabharata, shruti, smriti
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- Title Pages
- Introduction Foreword into the Past
- A Chronology of Hinduism
- Hinduism by any Other Name<sup>1</sup>
- Are Hindus Monotheists or Polytheists?<sup>1</sup>
- Three (or more) Forms of the Three (or more)–Fold Path in Hinduism<sup>1</sup>
- The Concept of Heresy in Hinduism<sup>1</sup>
- Eating Karma<sup>1</sup>
- Medical and Mythical Constructions of the Body in Sanskrit Texts<sup>1</sup>
- Death and Rebirthin Hinduism<sup>1</sup>
- Forgetting and Re-Awakening to Incarnation<sup>1</sup>
- Assume the Position: The Fight Over the Body of Yoga<sup>1</sup>
- The Toleration of Intolerance in Hinduism<sup>1</sup>
- The Politics of Hinduism Tomorrow<sup>1</sup>
- <i>Saguna</i> and <i>Nirguna</i> Images of the Deity<sup>1</sup>
- You can'T get here from there: The Logical Paradox of Hindu Creation Myths<sup>1</sup>
- Together Apart: Changing Ethical Implications of Hindu Cosmologies<sup>1</sup>
- God's Body, or, the <i>Lingam</i> made Flesh: Conflicts Over the Representation of Shiva<sup>1</sup>
- Sacrifice and Substitution: Ritual Mystification and Mythical Demystification in Hinduism<sup>1</sup>
- The Scrapbook of Undeserved Salvation: The <i>Kedara Khanda</i> of the <i>Skanda Purana</i> <sup>1</sup>
- Why should a Brahmin tell you Whom to Marry?: A Deconstruction of <i>the Laws of Manu</i> <sup>1</sup>
- Saranyu/Samjna: The Sun and the Shadow<sup>1</sup>
- The Clever Wife in Indian Mythology<sup>1</sup>
- Rings of Rejection and Recognition in Ancient India<sup>1</sup>
- The Third Nature : Gender Inversions in the <i>Kamasutra</i> <sup>1</sup>
- Bisexuality and Transsexuality among the Hindu Gods<sup>1</sup>
- Transsexual Transformations of Subjectivity and Memory in Hindu Mythology<sup>1</sup>
- The Control of Addiction in Ancient India<sup>1</sup>
- Reading the <i>Kamasutra</i>: It Isn't all about Sex<sup>1</sup>
- The Mythology of the <i>Kamasutra</i> <sup>1</sup>
- From Kama to Karma: The Resurgence of Puritanism in Contemporary India<sup>1</sup>
- The Ambivalence of Ahimsa<sup>1</sup>
- Zoomorphism in Ancient India: Humans More Bestial than the Beasts<sup>1</sup>
- The Mythology of Horses in India<sup>1</sup>
- The Submarine Mare in the Mythology of Shiva<sup>1</sup>
- Indra as the Stallion's Wife<sup>1</sup>
- Dogs as Dalits in Indian Literature<sup>1</sup>
- Sacred Cows and Beefeaters<sup>1</sup>
- Impermanence and Eternity in Hindu Epic, Art and Performance<sup>1</sup>
- Shadows of the <i>Ramayana</i> <sup>1</sup>
- Women in the <i>Mahabharata</i> <sup>1</sup>
- The History of Ekalavya<sup>1</sup>
- ‘I Have Scinde’: Orientalism and Guilt<sup>1</sup>
- Doniger O'flaherty on Doniger
- You Can't Make an Omelette<sup>1</sup>
- The Forest-Dweller<sup>1</sup>
- Appendix I Limericks on Hinduism
- APPENDIX II ESSAYS ON HINDUISM BY WENDY DONIGER
- List of Abbreviations
- Bibliography
- Index