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About the Author

A. K. Ramanujan taught at the University of Chicago and at various other institutions for forty years.
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Works by A. K. Ramanujan

Associated Works

Samskara: A Rite for a Dead Man (1976) — Translator, some editions — 341 copies
The Vintage Book of Contemporary World Poetry (1996) — Contributor — 311 copies
The Vintage Book of Modern Indian Literature (2001) — Contributor — 131 copies
Emergency Kit (1996) — Contributor, some editions — 109 copies
Sociolinguistics: Selected Readings (1972) — Contributor — 48 copies
Hymns for the drowning: Poems for Visnu (1981) — Translator, some editions — 33 copies
The Art of translation : voices from the field (1989) — Contributor — 4 copies

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Reviews

Picked this up on a Goodreads recommendation. A very well-written book with adequate notes, although I skipped Appendix 2 for now. If you're looking for something different and less known within the Indian canon, this is a good short read.
 
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haziqmir | 3 other reviews | Sep 29, 2023 |
Read and reread multiple times over the last few decades. Was reminded of this scholarly essay today while discussing The Ramayana with my family. Read it today once again - brilliantly researched, informative and enlightening. There is so much we don't know! Growing up on these stories , reading and listening to the sources available to us, many of us are unaware of the variations in the different versions of The Ramayana. I remember being fascinated by the paintings depicting scenes from the Ramakien at the Grand Palace in Bangkok, Thailand and pondering over how it seemed a bit different from the story I had read (as a child and adult in India).

The author limits his discussion to five “tellings” of the story - highlighting both the similarities and the differences, namely Kampan’s Tamil Iramavataram , Valmiki’s Sanskrit Ramayana, the Jain tellings, the South Indian folk Ramayana and the Southeast Asian Thai Ramakirti /Ramakien. The author mentions, “I have come to prefer the word tellings to the usual terms versions or variants because the latter terms can and typically do imply that there is an invariant, an original or Ur-text—usually Valmiki's Sanskrit Ramayana , the earliest and most prestigious of them all. But as we shall see, it is not always Valmiki's narrative that is carried from one language to another.”

A.K. Ramanujan’s “Three Hundred Ramayanas: Five Examples and Three Thoughts on Translation" is an excellent research-based essay that would appeal to those who are interested to know how the stories from The Ramayana have been told, retold, shared and interpreted through the ages. However, I would strongly recommend that you familiarize yourself with the story before you read this.
… (more)
 
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srms.reads | Sep 4, 2023 |
"Your breasts are like rival kings, my dear,
Each striving to invade the other's sphere."
 
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kencf0618 | 1 other review | May 24, 2021 |
Speaking of Siva is a selection of vacanas or free-verse sayings from the Virasaiva religious movement, dedicated to Siva as the supreme god. Written by four major saints, the greatest exponents of this poetic form, between the tenth and twelfth centuries, they are passionate lyrical expressions of the search for an unpredictable and spontaneous spiritual vision of 'now'. Here, yogic and tantric symbols, riddles and enigmas subvert the language of ordinary experience, as references to night and day, sex and family relationships take on new mystical meanings. These intense poems of personal devotion to a single deity also question traditional belief systems, customs, superstitions, image worship and even moral strictures, in verse that speaks to all men and women regardless of class and caste.… (more)
 
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PSZC | 3 other reviews | Apr 16, 2019 |

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