Śilpa prakāśa: medieval Orissan Sanskrit text on temple architecture. By Rāmacandra Kaulācāra. Translated and annotated by Alice Boner and Sadāśiva Rath Śarmā. Illustrations from the original palm-leaf manuscript text-drawings by Sadāśiva Rath Śarmā. pp. lvii, 166, plates I–LXXII; Sanskrit text, pp. 102. Leiden, E. J. Brill, 1966. Fl. 150.

Author(s):  
J. C. Harle
CounterText ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 30-56 ◽  
Author(s):  
Simona Sawhney

Engaging some of the questions opened by Ranjan Ghosh's and J. Hillis Miller's book Thinking Literature Across Continents (2016), this essay begins by returning to Aijaz Ahmad's earlier invocation of World Literature as a project that, like the proletariat itself, must stand in an antithetical relation to the capitalism that produced it. It asks: is there an essential link between a certain idea of literature and a figure of the world? If we try to broach this link through Derrida's enigmatic and repeated reflections on the secret – a secret ‘shared’ by both literature and democracy – how would we grasp Derrida's insistence on the ‘Latinity’ of literature? The groundlessness of reading that we confront most vividly in our encounter with fictional texts is both intensified, and in a way, clarified, by new readings and questions posed by the emergence of new reading publics. The essay contends that rather than being taught as representatives of national literatures, literary texts in ‘World Literature’ courses should be read as sites where serious historical and political debates are staged – debates which, while being local, are the bearers of universal significance. Such readings can only take place if World Literature strengthens its connections with the disciplines Miller calls, in the book, Social Studies. Paying particular attention to the Hindi writer Premchand's last story ‘Kafan’, and a brief section from the Sanskrit text the Natyashastra, it argues that struggles over representation, over the staging of minoritised figures, are integral to fiction and precede the thinking of modern democracy.


2019 ◽  
Vol 118 (12) ◽  
pp. 16-23
Author(s):  
M. Chitra ◽  
Dr. C. Madhesh

Siddha is considered to be one of the oldest medicines with its own benefits. In this modern era, people are more aware towards their health. At many circumstances of illness, people use Siddha medicines to cure their disease. Siddha is preferred for its own specialties. This paper has attempted to reveal the awareness towards Siddha medicines taking 52 respondents from Dharmapuri City. The results were analysed by using various statistical techniques like percentage analysis, chi-square and t test. Siddha focuses on the eight supernatural powers called as ‘Ashtaamahasiddhi’ and those who achieved these powers were known as siddhars. Hence it is called as siddha medicine. The siddhars knowledge was found in palm leaf manuscripts and their fragments were found in some parts of south India.


Author(s):  
S. V. Raghavan ◽  
R. Vasanth Kumar Mehta ◽  
G. Srinivasu
Keyword(s):  

2020 ◽  
pp. 113501
Author(s):  
Elsadig Mahdi ◽  
Daniel R. Hernández Ochoa ◽  
Ashkan Vaziri ◽  
Aamir Dean ◽  
Murat Kucukvar

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