This project aimed at the reconstruction of Śaivism’s intellectual history during the late Vijayanagara period will center on the above-mentioned schools’ a) major doctrinal and philosophical positions, with a focus on their innovations; b) their mutual influences and...
This project aimed at the reconstruction of Śaivism’s intellectual history during the late Vijayanagara period will center on the above-mentioned schools’ a) major doctrinal and philosophical positions, with a focus on their innovations; b) their mutual influences and interactions: social, intellectual, etc.; c) their scholars’ authorial intentions, textual practices and argumentative strategies; and d) their interactions with non-Śaiva religious groups and intellectuals. In addition to shedding new light on the well known religious diversity of the empire, this project will present a new picture of the Vijayanagara empire―one of the most historically significant courtly contexts in precolonial India―as a vital unit of the global intellectual culture of the Indian subcontinent during the late medieval/early modern period.
\"During the period of the project, I was able to present my research in a number of conference venues:
\"\"Beyond Polemics: The Śaiva Career of Appaya Dīkṣita.\"\" Sapienza Università di Roma, Rome, October 25th 2018.
\"\"ÅšÄkta and PratyabhijÃ±Ä Sources in VÄ«raÅ›aiva VedÄnta.\"\" World Sanskrit Conference 2018, Vancouver, July 12th 2018.
\"\"The VedÄnta of VÄ«raÅ›aivas.\"\" Sanskrit Reading Room, SOAS (University of London), February 28th 2018.
\"\"Reading from SudarÅ›anasÅ«ri\'s ÅšrutaprakÄÅ›ikÄ.\"\" Institute for the Cultural and Intellectual History of Asia (Vienna), October 10th 2017.
\"\"Reading from VÄ«raÅ›aivasÄroddhara with SomanÄtha\'s commentary.\"\" Institute for the Cultural and Intellectual History of Asia (Vienna), October 11th 2017. Co-authored with Dr Nina Mirnig.
\"\"Debating the Unspeakable: Non-dualism, deconstructionism and the problem of time in medieval India.\"\" Delivered at Charles University (Prague), May 9th 2017; and at Universita di Napoli l\"\"Orientale\"\" (Italy), May 29th 2017.
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I have also published two research articles, written during the period covered by this project:
\"\"On Appaya DÄ«ká¹£ita’s Engagement with VyÄsatÄ«rtha’s TarkatÄṇá¸ava,\"\"Journal of Indological Studies 27 (2019).
\"\"Śrīharṣa on the Indefinability of Time.\"\" In Space, Time and Limits of Understanding, edited by Shyam Iyengar and Giancarlo Ghirardi (Springer, Frontier Series, 2017). Co-authored with Prof. Krishnamurti Ramasubramanian (IIT Bombay, India).
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I have also a number of forthcoming publications for articles I have written during the period covered in this project:
The entry \"\"ÅšivÄdvaita VedÄnta\"\" for the Wiley-Blackwell Encyclopedia of Philosophy of Religion (accepted for publication in 2019).
\"\"Navya-NyÄya in the Late Vijayanagara Period: Appaya DÄ«ká¹£ita’s Revision of Gaá¹…geÅ›a’s īśvarÄnumÄna,\"\" forthcoming in a special issue I co-edit with Dr. Hugo David, entitled “‘Navya-NyÄya in Interaction with Other Knowledge-systems.’’ To be submitted in February 2019 to the Journal of Indian Philosophy.
\"\"Reuse and Adaptation of Appaya DÄ«ká¹£ita\'s ÅšivÄrcanacandrikÄ in a VÄ«raÅ›aiva Ritual Manual.\"\" In Editors of Sanskrit Texts: Materials for a History of Philology in South Asia, edited by Cristina Pecchia (Austrian Academy of Sciences Press, Vienna, forthcoming 2019).
\"\"On the Reception of RÄmÄnuja’s School in ÅšivÄdvaita VedÄnta.\"\" In One God, One Å›Ästra, edited by Marcus Schmücker and Elisa Freschi (Austrian Academy of Sciences Press, forthcoming 2019).
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I have just completed the last chapter of my monograph, to be submitted to Oxford University Press by the end of the Summer.
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Most of the results achieved during this project are included in my monograph which I will submit for publication by the end of the Summer 2019. This book is the first in-depth study of the Åšaiva oeuvre of the celebrated Sanskrit polymath Appaya DÄ«ká¹£ita (1520-1593). During nearly three decades, Appaya served at the court of Cinnabomma, an independent Åšaiva ruler at Vellore in the Tamil country. Under his patronage, Appaya wrote several polemical treatises and controversial tracts claiming the superiority of Åšiva over Viṣṇu-NÄrÄyaṇa, the deity worshipped by Vaiṣṇavas. His career under Cinnabomma culminated in the establishment of ÅšivÄdvaita VedÄnta, a prominent school of philosophical theology which not only won Appaya a formidable reputation as a scholar but also established him as a legendary advocate of Åšaiva religion in South India. This study sets in its historical context the ÅšivÄdvaita work of Appaya and its reception in early modern India. It offers new insights on Appaya\'s main source of exegesis, ÅšrÄ«kaṇá¹ha\'s BrahmamÄ«mÄṃsÄbhÄá¹£ya, and identifies Appaya\'s key intellectual influences and opponents. It also examines the various hermeneutical strategies he deployed to make his massive theological project a success, and documents how his Åšaiva work was critically received and reused in 17th- and 18th-century India. On conceptual and literary-historical grounds, the book demonstrates that Appaya\'s ÅšivÄdvaita project was mainly directed against ViÅ›iá¹£á¹Ädvaita VedÄnta, the dominant Vaiṣṇava school of theology in his time and place. By uncovering this history, the book sheds new light on the vibrant intellectual and politically charged milieu behind the emergence of the first ever Åšaiva school of VedÄnta. Finally, this study aims to provide a more nuanced portrait of Appaya DÄ«ká¹£ita, the scholar and the religious figure. It presents him not only as a prolific and bold intellectual, but also as a social agent sensitive to the conflicts that set apart Åšaivas and Vaiṣṇavas in the decaying Vijayanagara empire. In doing so, this book opens up new possibilities for our understanding of the complex relation between the world of Sanskrit literati and the wider socio-religious world in which they lived, wrote and debated in early modern India.
More info: https://www.orinst.ox.ac.uk/people/jonathan-duquette.