TY - BOOK
T1 - Empire inside out
T2 - religion, conquest and community in Kr̥ṣṇadēvarāya's Āmuktamālyada
AU - Shacham, Ilanit Loewy
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© Oxford University Press 2024. All rights reserved.
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - Empire Inside Out examines the emperor-poet Krsnadevarāya (r. 1509-1529), his magnum opus, the Āmuktamālyada (Giver of the Worn Garland), and a wide array of texts from South India, bringing to light the richness and complexity of a local culture and its ideas. The monograph explores the Vijayanagara Empire (fourteenth to seventeenth century) at its zenith, during the reign of its most celebrated monarch. The book considers how a royal author navigates cosmopolitan and regional, public and personal, convention and innovation, political duty and religious devotion. It highlights how profoundly literary texts from this period were both influenced by classical and conventional models of South Asian literature and invigorated by personal experiences, linguistic experimentation, and new modes of poetic expressivity. Empire Inside Out argues that KrsNadevarāya's text was groundbreaking, reflective of the dynamic period in which it was produced-replete with religious, political, historical, and ethnographic detail. It argues that the ŚrīvaisNava community, its ideology, and its Tamil landscape helped to define a new imperial idiom.
AB - Empire Inside Out examines the emperor-poet Krsnadevarāya (r. 1509-1529), his magnum opus, the Āmuktamālyada (Giver of the Worn Garland), and a wide array of texts from South India, bringing to light the richness and complexity of a local culture and its ideas. The monograph explores the Vijayanagara Empire (fourteenth to seventeenth century) at its zenith, during the reign of its most celebrated monarch. The book considers how a royal author navigates cosmopolitan and regional, public and personal, convention and innovation, political duty and religious devotion. It highlights how profoundly literary texts from this period were both influenced by classical and conventional models of South Asian literature and invigorated by personal experiences, linguistic experimentation, and new modes of poetic expressivity. Empire Inside Out argues that KrsNadevarāya's text was groundbreaking, reflective of the dynamic period in which it was produced-replete with religious, political, historical, and ethnographic detail. It argues that the ŚrīvaisNava community, its ideology, and its Tamil landscape helped to define a new imperial idiom.
KW - Classical Telugu
KW - Court poetry
KW - KrsNadevarāya
KW - Poetry
KW - Sanskrit
KW - Vernacularization
KW - Vijayanagara empire
KW - Āmuktamālyada
KW - Āntāl
KW - Śrīvaisnavism
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85203609224
U2 - 10.1093/oso/9780197776223.001.0001
DO - 10.1093/oso/9780197776223.001.0001
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AN - SCOPUS:85203609224
SN - 9780197776223
T3 - AAR religion in translation
BT - Empire inside out
PB - Oxford University Press
CY - New York, NY
ER -