Hammīra: Chapters in Imagination, Time, History: 83 (Religion and Society, 83) - Softcover

Malik, Aditya

 
9783111356020: Hammīra: Chapters in Imagination, Time, History: 83 (Religion and Society, 83)

Inhaltsangabe

This book is about the legendary Rajput chieftain Hammira Chauhan, the king of the impregnable fortress of Ranthambore in southern Rajasthan who died in 1301 CE after a monumental battle against Alauddin Khalji, the sultan of Delhi. This singular event reverberates through time to the point of creating a historical and cultural region that crystallizes through copious texts composed in different genres and languages (Persian, Sanskrit, Hindi, Rajasthani, English) in shifting religious and political contexts, medieval as well as modern. The main poetical-historical work composed in Sanskrit, the Hammira-Mahakavya ('great poem') by the Jaina poet Nayachandra Suri (15th century), is propelled by a dream in which the dead king urges the poet to write about his deeds. Can history with its preoccupation for the factual, begin in a dream? What does it mean to think about history and time via the imagination? Is time, whether past, present or future linked to imagination? Do imagination, time, and history arise together? What are the implications of thinking of history as something that appears in our experience? What does it mean to write a history as a historical being in whom diverse temporalities intertwine in the here and now?

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Über die Autorinnen und Autoren

Aditya Malik, Plaksha University, Punjab, India.

Aditya Malik, Plaksha University, Punjab, Indien.

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Hammīra Chauhān, king of the unconquerable fortress of Ranthambore in southern Rajasthan died in 1301 CE after a monumental battle againstʿAlāʾal-Dīn Khaljī, sultan of Delhi. This singular event reverberates through time to the point of creating a historical and cultural region that crystallizes through copious texts composed in different genres and languages (Persian, Sanskrit, Hindi, Rajasthani, English) in shifting religious and political contexts, medieval as well as modern. The main Sanskrit poetical work the Hammīra-Mahākāvya is propelled by a dream in which the dead king urges the poet to write about his deeds. Can history with its preoccupation for the factual, begin in a dream? What does it mean to think about history and time via the imagination? Do time and history arise together with the imagination?

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