
This book offers a detailed study of the oral narrative of Shri Devnarayan along with the first English translation of this popular Rajasthani folk narrative. The narrative extolling the deeds of Lord Devnarayan is performed by itinerant singers during all night vigils in front of a 9-meter long, elaborately painted cloth scroll that depicts scenes and characters from the story. Aditya Malik uses the narrative to explore and ask a range of innovative questions relevant to the study of Indian folk culture and Hinduism as a whole: How is orality conceptualized and practiced? What is the relationship between spoken and visual signs? How do Devnarayan's devotees create multiple discourses concerning religion, community, and history within and though the medium of the narrative? Malik's analysis suggests that the narrative provides a framework for establishing linkages between different communities, past and present, spoken word and visual image, as well as contending religious ideologies. His interpretation is interspersed with excerpts from interviews with devotees and singers, other tales and texts, and observations from his field research that together invoke the worlds created by the narrative.
How does the oral narrative of the Rajasthani folk deity Devnarayan function as a complex intersection of visual, spoken, and communal religious discourse? Aditya Malik, an expert in the study of Indian folk culture, utilizes his extensive field research and ethnographic observations to examine the performance of this narrative. He argues that the story of Devnarayan serves as a dynamic framework for negotiating identity, history, and religious ideology among diverse communities in South Asia.
What You Will Find
Scholars in the field of South Asian studies recognize this work as a significant contribution to the understanding of oral traditions and folk Hinduism. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which effectively bridges the gap between ethnographic fieldwork and theoretical analysis.
Page Count:
576
Publication Date:
2005-02-24
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0195150198
ISBN-13:
9780195150193
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