Gathasaptashati: Retelling Intimate history of Ancient Deccan

Authors

  • Smita Sahgal Associate Professor, Department of History, Lady Shri Ram College, (University of Delhi), Lajpat Nagar, New Delhi-110024

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.14738/assrj.62.6226

Keywords:

History Social Sciences Cultiral Studies

Abstract

A peep into intimate relations through the study of ancient Indian literature is rather rare. Most of the time Sanskrit literature presents a fairly regulated version of reality, bound by societal norms. On the other hand, Gathasaptashati or Sattasai, composed in Maharashtri Prakrit provides us a rare glimpse into the minds of the populace, especially that of the women who state their intimate desires, anguish and deprivations with a sense of abandon and honesty. This may have become possible as the society of ancient Deccan, where these verses were first composed and compiled, was still not fully stratified or complex. Patriarchy had not yet consolidated and did give women a voice which was preserved in the folklore and recalled now and then subsequently. It may be worth exploring these intimate relations by re-reading some verses and studying the context of their composition.

Key words: Gathsaptashati, rendezvous, go-between, traveller, love, eroticism, niti 

Author Biography

Smita Sahgal, Associate Professor, Department of History, Lady Shri Ram College, (University of Delhi), Lajpat Nagar, New Delhi-110024

Associate Professor, Department of History,
Lady Shri Ram College,
(University of Delhi),
Lajpat Nagar,
New Delhi-110024

References

Basak, Radha Govind, ed. The Prakrit Gatha Saptasati, Compiled by Satavahana king Hala, Asiatic Society, 2010.

Dandekar, R.N., Proceedings of Indian History Congress, Bombay, 1947.

Dandas, Paul , Sattsai and its Commentators, Taurino, 1985.

Khorche, Peter and Herman Tieken ed and trans. Poems on life and love in Ancient India: Hala Sattasai, Albany: SUNY, 2009.

Masson, J.M. ‘Truth or Falsity in Poetry’, Annals of the Bhandarkar Oriental Institute, Vol.60.no.1,1979, pp.225-228.

Mehrotra, A.K., The Absent Traveller; Prakrit Love and Poetry from the Gathasaptasati of Satavahana Hala, Delhi: Ravi Dayal Publisher, 1991.

Pollock,Sheldon, The Language of Gods in the World of Man: Sanskrit Culture and Power in Premodern India, Ranikhet, Permanent Black, 2006.

Winternitz, M., History of Indian Literature, 3 vols. Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass, 1963.

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Published

2019-03-03

How to Cite

Sahgal, S. (2019). Gathasaptashati: Retelling Intimate history of Ancient Deccan. Advances in Social Sciences Research Journal, 6(2), 467–474. https://doi.org/10.14738/assrj.62.6226