Dharma : its early history in law, religion, and narrative
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Dharma : its early history in law, religion, and narrative
(South Asia research)
Oxford University Press, 2011
Available at 12 libraries
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. [685]-725) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Between 300 BCE and 200 CE, concepts and practices of dharma attained literary prominence throughout India. Both Buddhist and Brahmanical authors sought to clarify and classify their central concerns, and dharma proved a means of thinking through and articulating those concerns.
Alf Hiltebeitel shows the different ways in which dharma was interpreted during that formative period: from the grand cosmic chronometries of kalpas and yugas to narratives about divine plans, gendered nuances of genealogical time, royal biography (even autobiography, in the case of the emperor Asoka), and guidelines for daily life, including meditation. He reveals the vital role dharma has played across political, religious, legal, literary, ethical, and philosophical domains
and discourses about what holds life together. Through dharma, these traditions have articulated their distinct visions of the good and well-rewarded life.
This insightful study explores the diverse and changing significance of dharma in classical India in nine major dharma texts, as well some shorter ones. Dharma proves to be a term by which to make a fresh cut through these texts, and to reconsider their own chronology, their import, and their relation to each other.
Table of Contents
- 1 Introduction
- 2. Asoka Maurya
- 3. A Vedic History of Dharma
- 4. Early Buddhism: Three Baskets of Dharma
- 5. Post-Vedic Brahmanical Dharma
- 6. Dharma over Time, I: Big Time Dharma
- 7. Dharma over Time, II: Prophesies of Disaster
- 8. Women's Dharma: Sastric Norms and Epic Narratives
- 9. Two Dharma Biographies? Yudhisthira and Rama
- 10. Draupadi and Sita: Dharmapatnis of Two Different Kinds
- 11. Dharma and the Bhagavad Gita
- 12. Bhakti and Dharma
- 13. Asvaghoa's Buddhacarita: A Buddhist Reading of the Sanskrit Epics and Their Treatments of Dharma
- 14. Bibliography
by "Nielsen BookData"