Dear Jan:

Can you send the publication details of the book?

Patrick



On Feb 6, 2024, at 5:22 PM, Jan E.M. Houben via INDOLOGY 
<[email protected]> wrote:

Dear List Members,

This is to announce the recent publication of
GULMINĪ, (An Anthology of Sanskrit Lyrics and Gazals)
by Prof. Hari Dutt Sharma

From the Foreword by Jan E.M. Houben:

... it is fortunate that apart from the rare and inevitably rather closed 
communities of traditional students of Vedic texts and rituals and also apart 
from the modern study of Sanskrit at Indian universities along the method of 
modern philology and textual studies, the tradition of creative writing in 
Sanskrit is carried on by several authors in India ; and one widely acclaimed 
author among these is Professor Hari Dutt Sharma. Apart from his academic study 
of Sanskrit poetry and poetics, Professor Sharma has emerged as a reputed 
author of modern Sanskrit literature.

... several of his poems and books have been prescribed in courses on Modern 
Sanskrit Literature at several Indian universities.
...
Prof. Sharma’s poems and books are excellently suited for introducing students 
to the lively scene of modern Sanskrit literature, and it would be advisable to 
add the reading of modern Sanskrit literature in the programs in universities 
outside India as well, in order to update the student’s mastery of Sanskrit in 
a way that would be difficult and unthinkable 100 or even 20 years ago. The 
focus on the study of Sanskrit in order to create a basis for textual research 
has to be maintained at western universities, because research is still the 
main professional perspective outside India. But to add an introduction to 
modern Sanskrit poetry and literature would help to open the eyes of Sanskrit 
students for the rich and variegated literary production in this domain, till 
now almost completely neglected by western scholars.
A recent exception is Beate Guttandin’s Rebellionen, Hamburg 2020, which 
contains annotated translations of a number of short stories in Sanskrit about 
tradition and innovation in daily life in Indian families.
...
In addition to the books by Prof. Sharma already mentioned above, also his 
recent Mahākāvya Vaideśikāṭanam, containing 21 cantos in various classical 
metres such as Indravajrā, Upajāti, etc., as it deals with the author’s visits 
to numerous countries and cities, including the then still separate East- and 
West-Germany, and his participation in academic events such as various sessions 
of the World Sanskrit Conference, would make an excellent reading for Sanskrit 
students at universities.
            This applies, finally, also to the current work of Prof. Sharma, 
the Gulminī, which is a book of lyrical poetry (gītikāvya), in rythmic and 
melodious Sanskrit in free metre, consisting of 51 poems expressing various 
sentiments and emotions (rasa and bhāva) on various subjects, from depictions 
of beautiful seasonal nature (3. madhumāsakathā) to reflections on 
international travels and the transmission of Sanskrit poetry (6. sañcaraṇam), 
and on the experience of poetic creation (1. badhyate hi cetanā). Other topics 
dealt with are recent events in the world and in India such as the terrorist 
attack on a school (vidyālaya) in Peshawar (2. peśāvara-paiśācikam, referring 
to the 16.12.2014 terrorist attack on the Army Public School in Peshawar), the 
rioting on Capitol Hill on 06.01.2021 (41. kaipīṭala-kampanam), the storming of 
Delhi’s Red Fort by protesting farmers on 26.01.2021 (42. dillīdurgākramaṇam). 
In poem 45 yuddhaṁ na hi ruddham, the author regrets the continuous arising of 
armed conflicts everywhere, kāśmīraṁ vā yūkreṇaṁ vā syād aphagānistānam.
...
... The theme of the author’s previous work, Vaideśikāṭanam, is also continued 
here, with poems 22. viśva-saṁskṛta-sammelanam (refrain : 
vaiśvika-saṁskṛta-sammelanam iha vaiṅkūvare tatam) and 25 on Vancouver : 
vaiṅkūvaraṁ varam. Poem 48. nīdaralaiṇḍe ham, deals with a recent trip to the 
Netherlands (with ham not for aham but as exclamation, as elsewhere in the poem 
and in the work).
...
...
The subject of poem 27. kumbhaḥ is a regular event with a very long history: 
the Prayāgrāj Kumbhamela in the author’s home city Allahabad. An Ardha 
Kumbhamela took here place in 2019, the next full one will be in 2025. In 49. 
kva nu hā gatāḥ the author wonders where all relatives, friends and dear ones 
who have passed away have gone, and evokes the Upaniṣadic story of Naciketas 
who questions the god of death Yama about the fate of the deceased : 
maraṇottaraṁ kva nu yāti saḥ ... mṛtyoḥ rahasyaṁ vai yamaṁ   pṛcchati ca 
naciketā citā.
...
...
Hommage and congratulations to Prof. Hari Dutt Sharma who traveled for many 
years to many countries outside India to attend academic events on the study of 
Sanskrit, and composed the fascinating Mahākāvya – poetic work of epic 
dimension – the Vaideśikāṭana ; who contributed significantly to Sanskrit 
literature also through the current work in lyrical poetry, Gulminī, and other 
works :

अनेकवत्सराद् येन   भूरिवैदेशिकाटनात् ।
परम् मनोहरं सृष्टं   काव्यं वैदेशिकाटनम् ॥
संस्कृतवाङ्मयं गीति – गुल्मिन्यादिभिरेव च ।
पुष्टं येन  नमस् तस्मै   हरये दत्तशर्मणे ॥






--
Jan E.M. Houben
Directeur d'Études, Professor of South Asian History and Philology
Sources et histoire de la tradition sanskrite
École Pratique des Hautes Études (EPHE, Paris Sciences et Lettres)
Sciences historiques et philologiques
Groupe de recherches en études indiennes (EA 2120)
johannes.houben [at] ephe.psl.eu<mailto:[email protected]>
https://ephe-sorbonne.academia.edu/JanEMHouben
https://www.classicalindia.info<https://www.classicalindia.info/>
LabEx Hastec -- L'Inde Classique augmentée: construction, transmission
     et transformations d'un savoir scientifique

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