Adhiyajña: Towards a Performance Grammar of the Vedas

Recent scholarship has challenged the anachronistic projection of the modern category of the poem onto premodern texts. This article attempts to theorize how one might construct an alternative to modern conceptualizations of “the poem” that more closely appropriates the conceptua...

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Main Author: Caley Charles Smith
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-06-01
Series:Religions
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/10/6/394
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spelling doaj-0a0948bce29d4dbd9b1729f3fb2653c72020-11-25T00:42:43ZengMDPI AGReligions2077-14442019-06-0110639410.3390/rel10060394rel10060394Adhiyajña: Towards a Performance Grammar of the VedasCaley Charles Smith0Religion and Philosophy Department, Young Harris College, Young Harris, GA 30582, USARecent scholarship has challenged the anachronistic projection of the modern category of the poem onto premodern texts. This article attempts to theorize how one might construct an alternative to modern conceptualizations of &#8220;the poem&#8221; that more closely appropriates the conceptualization of textuality in the Rigveda, an anthology of 1028 <i>sūkta</i>s &#8220;well-spoken (texts)&#8221; that represents the oldest religious literature in South Asia. In order to understand what these texts are and what they were expected to do, this article examines the techniques by which the Rigveda refers to itself, to its performer, to its audience, and to the occasion of its performance. In so doing, this article theorizes a &#8220;performance grammar&#8221; comprising three axes of textual self-reference (spatial, temporal, and personal); these axes of reference constitute a scene of performance populated by rhetorically constructed speakers and listeners. This performance narrative, called here the <i>adhiyaj&#241;a</i> level, frames the mythological narratives of the text. By examining the relationship between mythological narrative and performance narrative, we can better understand the purpose of performing a text and thus what kind of an entity Rigvedic &#8220;texts&#8221; really are. While this article proposes a rubric specifically for the Rigvedic context, its principles can be adapted to other premodern texts in order to better understand the performance context they presuppose.https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/10/6/394oralityphilologyperformancehermeneuticsdeixisnarrativeritualRigvedaspeech actpoetry
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Caley Charles Smith
spellingShingle Caley Charles Smith
Adhiyajña: Towards a Performance Grammar of the Vedas
Religions
orality
philology
performance
hermeneutics
deixis
narrative
ritual
Rigveda
speech act
poetry
author_facet Caley Charles Smith
author_sort Caley Charles Smith
title Adhiyajña: Towards a Performance Grammar of the Vedas
title_short Adhiyajña: Towards a Performance Grammar of the Vedas
title_full Adhiyajña: Towards a Performance Grammar of the Vedas
title_fullStr Adhiyajña: Towards a Performance Grammar of the Vedas
title_full_unstemmed Adhiyajña: Towards a Performance Grammar of the Vedas
title_sort adhiyajña: towards a performance grammar of the vedas
publisher MDPI AG
series Religions
issn 2077-1444
publishDate 2019-06-01
description Recent scholarship has challenged the anachronistic projection of the modern category of the poem onto premodern texts. This article attempts to theorize how one might construct an alternative to modern conceptualizations of &#8220;the poem&#8221; that more closely appropriates the conceptualization of textuality in the Rigveda, an anthology of 1028 <i>sūkta</i>s &#8220;well-spoken (texts)&#8221; that represents the oldest religious literature in South Asia. In order to understand what these texts are and what they were expected to do, this article examines the techniques by which the Rigveda refers to itself, to its performer, to its audience, and to the occasion of its performance. In so doing, this article theorizes a &#8220;performance grammar&#8221; comprising three axes of textual self-reference (spatial, temporal, and personal); these axes of reference constitute a scene of performance populated by rhetorically constructed speakers and listeners. This performance narrative, called here the <i>adhiyaj&#241;a</i> level, frames the mythological narratives of the text. By examining the relationship between mythological narrative and performance narrative, we can better understand the purpose of performing a text and thus what kind of an entity Rigvedic &#8220;texts&#8221; really are. While this article proposes a rubric specifically for the Rigvedic context, its principles can be adapted to other premodern texts in order to better understand the performance context they presuppose.
topic orality
philology
performance
hermeneutics
deixis
narrative
ritual
Rigveda
speech act
poetry
url https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/10/6/394
work_keys_str_mv AT caleycharlessmith adhiyajnatowardsaperformancegrammarofthevedas
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