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(less)Amar Chitra Katha- Ramanuja
He wrote commentaries on the Brahmasutras, the Upanishads and the Bhagwad Gita. It was his view that these three philosophical texts proclaim bhakti as the chief means of realizing God.
In his life and teachings, Ramanuja upheld that all humans are born equal and that caste or social status has no role in determining one-s relationship with God. He accepted Kanchi Purna, who was not Brahmin, as his guru.
One of his most worthy disciples, Dhanurdasa, was a non-Brahmin from a lower caste. For Ramanuja, a Vaishnava (man of God) is worthy of respect; but he defined as a true Vaishnaba only one who has abundant love for God.
Ramanuja (1017-1137), the great Vaishnava saint-philosopher, upheld bhakti (loving surrender to God) as the sole path to the realization of God. His school of philosophy is knows as Vishishta-Advaita (qualified monism) and his followers, the Srivaishnavas.
He wrote commentaries on the Brahmasutras, the Upanishads and the Bhagwad Gita. It was his view that these three philosophical texts proclaim bhakti as the chief means of realizing God.
In his life and teachings, Ramanuja upheld that all humans are born equal and that caste or social status has no role in determining one-s relationship with God. He accepted Kanchi Purna, who was not Brahmin, as his guru.
One of his most worthy disciples, Dhanurdasa, was a non-Brahmin from a lower caste. For Ramanuja, a Vaishnava (man of God) is worthy of respect; but he defined as a true Vaishnaba only one who has abundant love for God.
Deliverable Countries : This product ships to Ramanuja (1017-1137), the great Vaishnava saint-philosopher, upheld bhakti (loving surrender to God) as the sole path to the realization of God. His school of philosophy is knows as Vishishta-Advaita (qualified monism) and his followers, the Srivaishnavas.
He wrote commentaries on the Brahmasutras, the Upanishads and the Bhagwad Gita. It was his view that these three philosophical texts proclaim bhakti as the chief means of realizing God.
In his life and teachings, Ramanuja upheld that all humans are born equal and that caste or social status has no role in determining one-s relationship with God. He accepted Kanchi Purna, who was not Brahmin, as his guru.
One of his most worthy disciples, Dhanurdasa, was a non-Brahmin from a lower caste. For Ramanuja, a Vaishnava (man of God) is worthy of respect; but he defined as a true Vaishnaba only one who has abundant love for God.
Deliverable Countries : This product ships to Ramanuja (1017-1137), the great Vaishnava saint-philosopher, upheld bhakti (loving surrender to God) as the sole path to the realization of God. His school of philosophy is knows as Vishishta-Advaita (qualified monism) and his followers, the Srivaishnavas.
He wrote commentaries on the Brahmasutras, the Upanishads and the Bhagwad Gita. It was his view that these three philosophical texts proclaim bhakti as the chief means of realizing God.
In his life and teachings, Ramanuja upheld that all humans are born equal and that caste or social status has no role in determining one-s relationship with God. He accepted Kanchi Purna, who was not Brahmin, as his guru.
One of his most worthy disciples, Dhanurdasa, was a non-Brahmin from a lower caste. For Ramanuja, a Vaishnava (man of God) is worthy of respect; but he defined as a true Vaishnaba only one who has abundant love for God.
Deliverable Countries : This product ships to
(less)Amar Chitra Katha- Aniruddha
She opened her heart to her companion Chitralekha ('maker of pictures') but could not name the man. Chitralekha made drawings of the well-known princes from which Usha identified her sweetheart.
He turned out to be Aniruddha, grandson of Krishna. Chitralekha landed in Krishna's palace at night and brought sleeping Aniruddha to Usha's quarters.
Loved by and secretly married to Usha, he stayed on. Having known Aniruddha's whereabouts, Krishna and his army invaded Bana's capital and carried away the couple.
Usha was the daughter of demon-king Bana with a thousand heads, unconquerable by anyone not equal to Shiva. Usha saw an unknown, handsome young hero in her dream and fell in love with him.
She opened her heart to her companion Chitralekha ('maker of pictures') but could not name the man. Chitralekha made drawings of the well-known princes from which Usha identified her sweetheart.
He turned out to be Aniruddha, grandson of Krishna. Chitralekha landed in Krishna's palace at night and brought sleeping Aniruddha to Usha's quarters.
Loved by and secretly married to Usha, he stayed on. Having known Aniruddha's whereabouts, Krishna and his army invaded Bana's capital and carried away the couple.
Deliverable Countries : This product ships to Usha was the daughter of demon-king Bana with a thousand heads, unconquerable by anyone not equal to Shiva. Usha saw an unknown, handsome young hero in her dream and fell in love with him.
She opened her heart to her companion Chitralekha ('maker of pictures') but could not name the man. Chitralekha made drawings of the well-known princes from which Usha identified her sweetheart.
He turned out to be Aniruddha, grandson of Krishna. Chitralekha landed in Krishna's palace at night and brought sleeping Aniruddha to Usha's quarters.
Loved by and secretly married to Usha, he stayed on. Having known Aniruddha's whereabouts, Krishna and his army invaded Bana's capital and carried away the couple.
Deliverable Countries : This product ships to Usha was the daughter of demon-king Bana with a thousand heads, unconquerable by anyone not equal to Shiva. Usha saw an unknown, handsome young hero in her dream and fell in love with him.
She opened her heart to her companion Chitralekha ('maker of pictures') but could not name the man. Chitralekha made drawings of the well-known princes from which Usha identified her sweetheart.
He turned out to be Aniruddha, grandson of Krishna. Chitralekha landed in Krishna's palace at night and brought sleeping Aniruddha to Usha's quarters.
Loved by and secretly married to Usha, he stayed on. Having known Aniruddha's whereabouts, Krishna and his army invaded Bana's capital and carried away the couple.
Deliverable Countries : This product ships to
(less)Amar Chitra Katha- Soordas
Soordas was not only a poet, but also a great composer. His songs became so popular that even during his lifetime, he had become a legend.
If Brij is understood today from Rajasthan and Punjab on the West to Assam in the East, the credit goes almost entirely to Soordas- songs. Many of his songs are included even in the Granth Sahab, the holy book of the Sikhs - a testimony to their popularity.
Though he is credited with the composition of 25 works, perhaps he wrote only seven. Of these, Soor-Sagar has the pride of place, followed by Soor-Saravali and Sahitya Lahari.
According to legend, Soor-Sagar consisted of a hundred thousand songs, though today only a few thousand of these are known and sung.Soordas was a follower of the Pushti Cult, founded by Vallabhacharya.
This cult looked upon Krishna as the supreme incarnation of God and believed that God can be attained only through His grace. Like many other Vaishnavaite cults, the Pushti Cult too held that all those who worship God belong to the same brotherhood, irrespective of their caste.
The affection of Yashoda and the gopis, the cowherd-girls of Brij, for Krishna; the intense love of Radha for Krishna and the dalliance of the latter with the gopis formed the theme of most of his songs. Soordas, the blind bard of Brij, occupies a very eminent position in Hindi literature.
He is considered the Valmiki of Brij (a dialect of Hindi), not only because he was the first poet to write in that dialect, but also because his works have an epic stature.Soordas was not only a poet, but also a great composer.
His songs became so popular that even during his lifetime, he had become a legend. If Brij is understood today from Rajasthan and Punjab on the West to Assam in the East, the credit goes almost entirely to Soordas- songs.
Many of his songs are included even in the Granth Sahab, the holy book of the Sikhs - a testimony to their popularity. Though he is credited with the composition of 25 works, perhaps he wrote only seven.
Of these, Soor-Sagar has the pride of place, followed by Soor-Saravali and Sahitya Lahari. According to legend, Soor-Sagar consisted of a hundred thousand songs, though today only a few thousand of these are known and sung.
Soordas was a follower of the Pushti Cult, founded by Vallabhacharya. This cult looked upon Krishna as the supreme incarnation of God and believed that God can be attained only through His grace.
Like many other Vaishnavaite cults, the Pushti Cult too held that all those who worship God belong to the same brotherhood, irrespective of their caste.The affection of Yashoda and the gopis, the cowherd-girls of Brij, for Krishna; the intense love of Radha for Krishna and the dalliance of the latter with the gopis formed the theme of most of his songs.
Deliverable Countries : This product ships to Soordas, the blind bard of Brij, occupies a very eminent position in Hindi literature. He is considered the Valmiki of Brij (a dialect of Hindi), not only because he was the first poet to write in that dialect, but also because his works have an epic stature.
Soordas was not only a poet, but also a great composer. His songs became so popular that even during his lifetime, he had become a legend.
If Brij is understood today from Rajasthan and Punjab on the West to Assam in the East, the credit goes almost entirely to Soordas- songs. Many of his songs are included even in the Granth Sahab, the holy book of the Sikhs - a testimony to their popularity.
Though he is credited with the composition of 25 works, perhaps he wrote only seven. Of these, Soor-Sagar has the pride of place, followed by Soor-Saravali and Sahitya Lahari.
According to legend, Soor-Sagar consisted of a hundred thousand songs, though today only a few thousand of these are known and sung.Soordas was a follower of the Pushti Cult, founded by Vallabhacharya.
This cult looked upon Krishna as the supreme incarnation of God and believed that God can be attained only through His grace. Like many other Vaishnavaite cults, the Pushti Cult too held that all those who worship God belong to the same brotherhood, irrespective of their caste.
The affection of Yashoda and the gopis, the cowherd-girls of Brij, for Krishna; the intense love of Radha for Krishna and the dalliance of the latter with the gopis formed the theme of most of his songs. Deliverable Countries : This product ships to Soordas, the blind bard of Brij, occupies a very eminent position in Hindi literature.
He is considered the Valmiki of Brij (a dialect of Hindi), not only because he was the first poet to write in that dialect, but also because his works have an epic stature.Soordas was not only a poet, but also a great composer.
His songs became so popular that even during his lifetime, he had become a legend. If Brij is understood today from Rajasthan and Punjab on the West to Assam in the East, the credit goes almost entirely to Soordas- songs.
Many of his songs are included even in the Granth Sahab, the holy book of the Sikhs - a testimony to their popularity. Though he is credited with the composition of 25 works, perhaps he wrote only seven.
Of these, Soor-Sagar has the pride of place, followed by Soor-Saravali and Sahitya Lahari. According to legend, Soor-Sagar consisted of a hundred thousand songs, though today only a few thousand of these are known and sung.
Soordas was a follower of the Pushti Cult, founded by Vallabhacharya. This cult looked upon Krishna as the supreme incarnation of God and believed that God can be attained only through His grace.
Like many other Vaishnavaite cults, the Pushti Cult too held that all those who worship God belong to the same brotherhood, irrespective of their caste.The affection of Yashoda and the gopis, the cowherd-girls of Brij, for Krishna; the intense love of Radha for Krishna and the dalliance of the latter with the gopis formed the theme of most of his songs.
Deliverable Countries : This product ships to
(less)Amar Chitra Katha- Birbal The Clever
He led an expedition into faraway Afghanistan and managed to subdue the turbulence there. Hearing the news of hi death there, Akbar burst forth : "Birbal, you always gave the helpless whatever you had.
I am helpless now and yet you have left nothng for me!" Birbal's name however does not rest on these achievements. He is turned into a legend by the innumerable stories of his wit and wisdom, sense of justice and fairplay, and above all, his uncanny skill in turning the tables on his detractors including the king himself.
In the stories here, Birbal, proposes the punishment of a kiss for the offence of pulling a hair from the king's moustache; shows how one's own child is the most beautiful; proves that the whims of a child can beat the king; makes the king realize that inauspiciousness can be mutual; guesses the mother-tongue of a linguist with a spray of water. Birbal, a real person with the name 'Maheshdas', was one of the 'nine gems' of court advisers of Akbar the Great.
He also composed poetry by the pen name 'Brahma'. He led an expedition into faraway Afghanistan and managed to subdue the turbulence there.
Hearing the news of hi death there, Akbar burst forth : "Birbal, you always gave the helpless whatever you had. I am helpless now and yet you have left nothng for me!" Birbal's name however does not rest on these achievements.
He is turned into a legend by the innumerable stories of his wit and wisdom, sense of justice and fairplay, and above all, his uncanny skill in turning the tables on his detractors including the king himself. In the stories here, Birbal, proposes the punishment of a kiss for the offence of pulling a hair from the king's moustache; shows how one's own child is the most beautiful; proves that the whims of a child can beat the king; makes the king realize that inauspiciousness can be mutual; guesses the mother-tongue of a linguist with a spray of water.
Deliverable Countries : This product ships to Birbal, a real person with the name 'Maheshdas', was one of the 'nine gems' of court advisers of Akbar the Great. He also composed poetry by the pen name 'Brahma'.
He led an expedition into faraway Afghanistan and managed to subdue the turbulence there. Hearing the news of hi death there, Akbar burst forth : "Birbal, you always gave the helpless whatever you had.
I am helpless now and yet you have left nothng for me!" Birbal's name however does not rest on these achievements. He is turned into a legend by the innumerable stories of his wit and wisdom, sense of justice and fairplay, and above all, his uncanny skill in turning the tables on his detractors including the king himself.
In the stories here, Birbal, proposes the punishment of a kiss for the offence of pulling a hair from the king's moustache; shows how one's own child is the most beautiful; proves that the whims of a child can beat the king; makes the king realize that inauspiciousness can be mutual; guesses the mother-tongue of a linguist with a spray of water. Deliverable Countries : This product ships to Birbal, a real person with the name 'Maheshdas', was one of the 'nine gems' of court advisers of Akbar the Great.
He also composed poetry by the pen name 'Brahma'. He led an expedition into faraway Afghanistan and managed to subdue the turbulence there.
Hearing the news of hi death there, Akbar burst forth : "Birbal, you always gave the helpless whatever you had. I am helpless now and yet you have left nothng for me!" Birbal's name however does not rest on these achievements.
He is turned into a legend by the innumerable stories of his wit and wisdom, sense of justice and fairplay, and above all, his uncanny skill in turning the tables on his detractors including the king himself. In the stories here, Birbal, proposes the punishment of a kiss for the offence of pulling a hair from the king's moustache; shows how one's own child is the most beautiful; proves that the whims of a child can beat the king; makes the king realize that inauspiciousness can be mutual; guesses the mother-tongue of a linguist with a spray of water.
Deliverable Countries : This product ships to
(less)Amar Chitra Katha- Tales Of Narada
Yet, even he does not escape being led astray by the god of love or by pride in his devotion itself. The stories here are meant to be lessons in humility and in the superiority of the devotion of commoners during their daily toils.
Narada is a sage, most devoted to Vishnu, the protector god. He is ever on the move, singing praises of the god.
Yet, even he does not escape being led astray by the god of love or by pride in his devotion itself. The stories here are meant to be lessons in humility and in the superiority of the devotion of commoners during their daily toils.
Deliverable Countries : This product ships to Narada is a sage, most devoted to Vishnu, the protector god. He is ever on the move, singing praises of the god.
Yet, even he does not escape being led astray by the god of love or by pride in his devotion itself. The stories here are meant to be lessons in humility and in the superiority of the devotion of commoners during their daily toils.
Deliverable Countries : This product ships to Narada is a sage, most devoted to Vishnu, the protector god. He is ever on the move, singing praises of the god.
Yet, even he does not escape being led astray by the god of love or by pride in his devotion itself. The stories here are meant to be lessons in humility and in the superiority of the devotion of commoners during their daily toils.
Deliverable Countries : This product ships to
(less)Stories of Krishna: Amar Chitra Katha (5 in 1)
Amar Chitra Katha- J. T. Jackal Storis (Hindi)
He was the ambassador of Seleucus Nicator at the court of Chandragupata Maurya and he had the opportunity to travel extensively in the country and observe closely the proceedings at the royal court, various aspects of military and civil administration, the geography of the country, the social and economic conditions of the people and the political institutions. He put down his observations in four volumes entitled -Indica-Indica- in its original form has now been lost, but some later writers like Diodorus, Pliny, Strabo and Arrian have quoted from the work.
Barring the few instances where Megasthenes had to rely on hearsay, his account of India is highly valued for its accuracy and authenticity. This story of Megasthenes is based on his own account of India of his times.
For purposes of coherence and lucidity we have adopted a sequence of our own to this narration. However, historically the record is accurate.
Megasthenes was among the first foreigners to have visited India in historical times and given an eyewitness account of conditions prevailing in this country during the fourth century B.C.
He was the ambassador of Seleucus Nicator at the court of Chandragupata Maurya and he had the opportunity to travel extensively in the country and observe closely the proceedings at the royal court, various aspects of military and civil administration, the geography of the country, the social and economic conditions of the people and the political institutions. He put down his observations in four volumes entitled -Indica-Indica- in its original form has now been lost, but some later writers like Diodorus, Pliny, Strabo and Arrian have quoted from the work.
Barring the few instances where Megasthenes had to rely on hearsay, his account of India is highly valued for its accuracy and authenticity. This story of Megasthenes is based on his own account of India of his times.
For purposes of coherence and lucidity we have adopted a sequence of our own to this narration. However, historically the record is accurate.
Deliverable Countries : This product ships to Megasthenes was among the first foreigners to have visited India in historical times and given an eyewitness account of conditions prevailing in this country during the fourth century B.C.
He was the ambassador of Seleucus Nicator at the court of Chandragupata Maurya and he had the opportunity to travel extensively in the country and observe closely the proceedings at the royal court, various aspects of military and civil administration, the geography of the country, the social and economic conditions of the people and the political institutions. He put down his observations in four volumes entitled -Indica-Indica- in its original form has now been lost, but some later writers like Diodorus, Pliny, Strabo and Arrian have quoted from the work.
Barring the few instances where Megasthenes had to rely on hearsay, his account of India is highly valued for its accuracy and authenticity. This story of Megasthenes is based on his own account of India of his times.
For purposes of coherence and lucidity we have adopted a sequence of our own to this narration. However, historically the record is accurate.
Deliverable Countries : This product ships to Megasthenes was among the first foreigners to have visited India in historical times and given an eyewitness account of conditions prevailing in this country during the fourth century B.C.
He was the ambassador of Seleucus Nicator at the court of Chandragupata Maurya and he had the opportunity to travel extensively in the country and observe closely the proceedings at the royal court, various aspects of military and civil administration, the geography of the country, the social and economic conditions of the people and the political institutions. He put down his observations in four volumes entitled -Indica-Indica- in its original form has now been lost, but some later writers like Diodorus, Pliny, Strabo and Arrian have quoted from the work.
Barring the few instances where Megasthenes had to rely on hearsay, his account of India is highly valued for its accuracy and authenticity. This story of Megasthenes is based on his own account of India of his times.
For purposes of coherence and lucidity we have adopted a sequence of our own to this narration. However, historically the record is accurate.
Deliverable Countries : This product ships to
(less)Amar Chitra Katha- The Four Friends (Karadi Tales)
Deliverable Countries : This product ships to In this delightful story about friendship and loyalty, a set of our unusual friends, a tortoise, a mole, a deer and a crow join forces to outwit a hunter. Deliverable Countries : This product ships to In this delightful story about friendship and loyalty, a set of our unusual friends, a tortoise, a mole, a deer and a crow join forces to outwit a hunter.
Deliverable Countries : This product ships to
(less)Amar Chitra Katha- The Monkey King (Karadi Tales)
Can Kapi, the monkey king, find a way to protect his subjects? The King of Benares and his army have arrived in the monkey kingdom in search of the mango..
Can Kapi, the monkey king, find a way to protect his subjects? Deliverable Countries : This product ships to The King of Benares and his army have arrived in the monkey kingdom in search of the mango..
Can Kapi, the monkey king, find a way to protect his subjects? Deliverable Countries : This product ships to The King of Benares and his army have arrived in the monkey kingdom in search of the mango..
Can Kapi, the monkey king, find a way to protect his subjects? Deliverable Countries : This product ships to
(less)Amar Chitra Katha- The Musical Donkey (Karadi Tales)
Find out how Dhondu-s irresistible urge to sing lands him in big trouble one night. Dhondu, the donkey, thinks he is a wonderful singer.
His friend, Juno, the jackal, thinks otherwise. Find out how Dhondu-s irresistible urge to sing lands him in big trouble one night.
Deliverable Countries : This product ships to Dhondu, the donkey, thinks he is a wonderful singer. His friend, Juno, the jackal, thinks otherwise.
Find out how Dhondu-s irresistible urge to sing lands him in big trouble one night. Deliverable Countries : This product ships to Dhondu, the donkey, thinks he is a wonderful singer.
His friend, Juno, the jackal, thinks otherwise. Find out how Dhondu-s irresistible urge to sing lands him in big trouble one night.
Deliverable Countries : This product ships to
(less)Amar Chitra Katha- Guru Gobind Singh
In the late 17th century, Aurangzeb, the Mughal emperor of Delhi, launched a campaign of persecution against the Sikhs. The ninth Sikh Guru, Tegh Bahadur was put to death on his orders.
Gobinda his nine-year old son was made Guru. He achieved proficiency in Sanskrit and Persian as also in the martial arts.
He transformed the Sikhs into disciplined volunteers prepared to fight for the faith. Five emblems including the sword were prescribed for them and they were called Singh's ('lions').
The execution of his own sons did not deflect him from his cause. Guru Gobind Singh wrote poetry, which was included in the Granth, the Holy Book of Sikhs.
He enjoined loyalty to the Granth rather than the Guru in person. His death at the hands of treacherous killers made him immortal in the hearts of generations of Sikhs.
The Sikhs ('disciples') were a religious community in Punjab; their faith followed a blend of the best concepts of the religions of the region. They had a Guru ('master') as the head of the community.
In the late 17th century, Aurangzeb, the Mughal emperor of Delhi, launched a campaign of persecution against the Sikhs. The ninth Sikh Guru, Tegh Bahadur was put to death on his orders.
Gobinda his nine-year old son was made Guru. He achieved proficiency in Sanskrit and Persian as also in the martial arts.
He transformed the Sikhs into disciplined volunteers prepared to fight for the faith. Five emblems including the sword were prescribed for them and they were called Singh's ('lions').
The execution of his own sons did not deflect him from his cause. Guru Gobind Singh wrote poetry, which was included in the Granth, the Holy Book of Sikhs.
He enjoined loyalty to the Granth rather than the Guru in person. His death at the hands of treacherous killers made him immortal in the hearts of generations of Sikhs.
Deliverable Countries : This product ships to The Sikhs ('disciples') were a religious community in Punjab; their faith followed a blend of the best concepts of the religions of the region. They had a Guru ('master') as the head of the community.
In the late 17th century, Aurangzeb, the Mughal emperor of Delhi, launched a campaign of persecution against the Sikhs. The ninth Sikh Guru, Tegh Bahadur was put to death on his orders.
Gobinda his nine-year old son was made Guru. He achieved proficiency in Sanskrit and Persian as also in the martial arts.
He transformed the Sikhs into disciplined volunteers prepared to fight for the faith. Five emblems including the sword were prescribed for them and they were called Singh's ('lions').
The execution of his own sons did not deflect him from his cause. Guru Gobind Singh wrote poetry, which was included in the Granth, the Holy Book of Sikhs.
He enjoined loyalty to the Granth rather than the Guru in person. His death at the hands of treacherous killers made him immortal in the hearts of generations of Sikhs.
Deliverable Countries : This product ships to The Sikhs ('disciples') were a religious community in Punjab; their faith followed a blend of the best concepts of the religions of the region. They had a Guru ('master') as the head of the community.
In the late 17th century, Aurangzeb, the Mughal emperor of Delhi, launched a campaign of persecution against the Sikhs. The ninth Sikh Guru, Tegh Bahadur was put to death on his orders.
Gobinda his nine-year old son was made Guru. He achieved proficiency in Sanskrit and Persian as also in the martial arts.
He transformed the Sikhs into disciplined volunteers prepared to fight for the faith. Five emblems including the sword were prescribed for them and they were called Singh's ('lions').
The execution of his own sons did not deflect him from his cause. Guru Gobind Singh wrote poetry, which was included in the Granth, the Holy Book of Sikhs.
He enjoined loyalty to the Granth rather than the Guru in person. His death at the hands of treacherous killers made him immortal in the hearts of generations of Sikhs.
Deliverable Countries : This product ships to
(less)Amar Chitra Katha- Mazoo Mazoo (Karadi Tales)
But just when it is all ready, guests arrive - unwanted guests, who sniff out a good free meal! Deliverable Countries : This product ships to A folktale from Kashmir Nazneen carefully cooks some fragrant marzwangan kurma for a special family dinner. But just when it is all ready, guests arrive - unwanted guests, who sniff out a good free meal! Deliverable Countries : This product ships to A folktale from Kashmir Nazneen carefully cooks some fragrant marzwangan kurma for a special family dinner.
But just when it is all ready, guests arrive - unwanted guests, who sniff out a good free meal! Deliverable Countries : This product ships to
(less)Kamasutra
Wendy Doniger has contributed to Kamasutra as a translator. Wendy Doniger is Mircea Eliade Distinguished Service Professor of the History of Religions at the University of Chicago.
She has also translated "The Kama-sutra" (with Sudhir Kakar), "The Rig Veda: An Anthology", "Hindu Myths: A Sourcebook" and "The Laws of Manu" (with Brian K. Smith), and is the author of nine more books about Indian culture.
Our Miniature Edition(TM) abridgment of one of the world's best-known texts is accompanied by lush, sensuous illustrations. The oldest existing Hindu book of erotic love, the "Kamasutra" still has much to offer modern lovers looking for new paths to pleasure and enlightenment.
Wendy Doniger has contributed to Kamasutra as a translator. Wendy Doniger is Mircea Eliade Distinguished Service Professor of the History of Religions at the University of Chicago.
She has also translated "The Kama-sutra" (with Sudhir Kakar), "The Rig Veda: An Anthology", "Hindu Myths: A Sourcebook" and "The Laws of Manu" (with Brian K. Smith), and is the author of nine more books about Indian culture.
Deliverable Countries : This product ships to Our Miniature Edition(TM) abridgment of one of the world's best-known texts is accompanied by lush, sensuous illustrations. The oldest existing Hindu book of erotic love, the "Kamasutra" still has much to offer modern lovers looking for new paths to pleasure and enlightenment.
Wendy Doniger has contributed to Kamasutra as a translator. Wendy Doniger is Mircea Eliade Distinguished Service Professor of the History of Religions at the University of Chicago.
She has also translated "The Kama-sutra" (with Sudhir Kakar), "The Rig Veda: An Anthology", "Hindu Myths: A Sourcebook" and "The Laws of Manu" (with Brian K. Smith), and is the author of nine more books about Indian culture.
Deliverable Countries : This product ships to
(less)Amar Chitra Katha- Tinkle Coloring Book 4 (Tinkle)
20 pages of fun with colours! Deliverable Countries : This product ships to Tinkle Colouring Book 4: Shambu and the Pirates & Other Adventures Colour your favourite colouring Tinkle Toons while enjoying their stories in a simple easy- to-read format. 20 pages of fun with colours! Deliverable Countries : This product ships to Tinkle Colouring Book 4: Shambu and the Pirates & Other Adventures Colour your favourite colouring Tinkle Toons while enjoying their stories in a simple easy- to-read format.
20 pages of fun with colours! Deliverable Countries : This product ships to
(less)Kamasutra
It is about the art of living--about finding a partner, maintaining power in a marriage, committing adultery, living as or with a courtesan, using drugs--and also, of course, about the many and varied positions available to lovers in sexual intercourse and the pleasures to be derived from each. The Kamasutra was composed in Sanskrit, the literary language of ancient India, sometime in the third century, probably in North India.
It combines an encyclopedic coverage of all imaginable aspects of sex with a closely observed sexual psychology and a dramatic, novelistic narrative of seduction, consummation, and disentanglement. Best known in English through the highly mannered, padded, and inaccurate nineteenth-century translation by Sir Richard Burton, the text is newly translated here into clear, vivid, sexually frank English.
This edition also includes a section of vivid Indian color illustrations along with three uniquely important commentaries: translated excerpts from the earliest and most famous Sanskrit commentary (thirteenth century) and from a twentieth-century Hindi commentary, and explanatory notes by the two translators. The lively and entertaining introduction by translator Wendy Doniger, one of the world's foremost Sanskrit scholars, discusses the history of The Kamasutra and its reception in India and Europe, analyses its attitudes toward gender and sexual violence, and sets it in the context of ancient Indian social theory, scientific method, and sexual ethics.
" This] new translation is fascinating, thought-provoking and occasionally even amusing."--Salon.
com Mallanaga Vatsyayana has contributed to Kamasutra as an author. Vatsyayana (Third Century BC) was an ascetic and a master of the sensual and the erotic.
Wendy Doniger has contributed to Kamasutra as a translator. Wendy Doniger is Mircea Eliade Distinguished Service Professor of the History of Religions at the University of Chicago.
She has also translated "The Kama-sutra" (with Sudhir Kakar), "The Rig Veda: An Anthology", "Hindu Myths: A Sourcebook" and "The Laws of Manu" (with Brian K. Smith), and is the author of nine more books about Indian culture.
Deliverable Countries : This product ships to Mallanaga Vatsyayana has contributed to Kamasutra as an author. Vatsyayana (Third Century BC) was an ascetic and a master of the sensual and the erotic.
Wendy Doniger has contributed to Kamasutra as a translator. Wendy Doniger is Mircea Eliade Distinguished Service Professor of the History of Religions at the University of Chicago.
She has also translated "The Kama-sutra" (with Sudhir Kakar), "The Rig Veda: An Anthology", "Hindu Myths: A Sourcebook" and "The Laws of Manu" (with Brian K. Smith), and is the author of nine more books about Indian culture.
The Kamasutra is the oldest extant textbook of erotic love. But it is more than a book about sex.
It is about the art of living--about finding a partner, maintaining power in a marriage, committing adultery, living as or with a courtesan, using drugs--and also, of course, about the many and varied positions available to lovers in sexual intercourse and the pleasures to be derived from each. The Kamasutra was composed in Sanskrit, the literary language of ancient India, sometime in the third century, probably in North India.
It combines an encyclopedic coverage of all imaginable aspects of sex with a closely observed sexual psychology and a dramatic, novelistic narrative of seduction, consummation, and disentanglement. Best known in English through the highly mannered, padded, and inaccurate nineteenth-century translation by Sir Richard Burton, the text is newly translated here into clear, vivid, sexually frank English.
This edition also includes a section of vivid Indian color illustrations along with three uniquely important commentaries: translated excerpts from the earliest and most famous Sanskrit commentary (thirteenth century) and from a twentieth-century Hindi commentary, and explanatory notes by the two translators. The lively and entertaining introduction by translator Wendy Doniger, one of the world's foremost Sanskrit scholars, discusses the history of The Kamasutra and its reception in India and Europe, analyses its attitudes toward gender and sexual violence, and sets it in the context of ancient Indian social theory, scientific method, and sexual ethics.
" This] new translation is fascinating, thought-provoking and occasionally even amusing."--Salon.
com Mallanaga Vatsyayana has contributed to Kamasutra as an author. Vatsyayana (Third Century BC) was an ascetic and a master of the sensual and the erotic.
Wendy Doniger has contributed to Kamasutra as a translator. Wendy Doniger is Mircea Eliade Distinguished Service Professor of the History of Religions at the University of Chicago.
She has also translated "The Kama-sutra" (with Sudhir Kakar), "The Rig Veda: An Anthology", "Hindu Myths: A Sourcebook" and "The Laws of Manu" (with Brian K. Smith), and is the author of nine more books about Indian culture.
Deliverable Countries : This product ships to The Kamasutra is the oldest extant textbook of erotic love. But it is more than a book about sex.
It is about the art of living--about finding a partner, maintaining power in a marriage, committing adultery, living as or with a courtesan, using drugs--and also, of course, about the many and varied positions available to lovers in sexual intercourse and the pleasures to be derived from each. The Kamasutra was composed in Sanskrit, the literary language of ancient India, sometime in the third century, probably in North India.
It combines an encyclopedic coverage of all imaginable aspects of sex with a closely observed sexual psychology and a dramatic, novelistic narrative of seduction, consummation, and disentanglement. Best known in English through the highly mannered, padded, and inaccurate nineteenth-century translation by Sir Richard Burton, the text is newly translated here into clear, vivid, sexually frank English.
This edition also includes a section of vivid Indian color illustrations along with three uniquely important commentaries: translated excerpts from the earliest and most famous Sanskrit commentary (thirteenth century) and from a twentieth-century Hindi commentary, and explanatory notes by the two translators. The lively and entertaining introduction by translator Wendy Doniger, one of the world's foremost Sanskrit scholars, discusses the history of The Kamasutra and its reception in India and Europe, analyses its attitudes toward gender and sexual violence, and sets it in the context of ancient Indian social theory, scientific method, and sexual ethics.
" This] new translation is fascinating, thought-provoking and occasionally even amusing."--Salon.
com Mallanaga Vatsyayana has contributed to Kamasutra as an author. Vatsyayana (Third Century BC) was an ascetic and a master of the sensual and the erotic.
Wendy Doniger has contributed to Kamasutra as a translator. Wendy Doniger is Mircea Eliade Distinguished Service Professor of the History of Religions at the University of Chicago.
She has also translated "The Kama-sutra" (with Sudhir Kakar), "The Rig Veda: An Anthology", "Hindu Myths: A Sourcebook" and "The Laws of Manu" (with Brian K. Smith), and is the author of nine more books about Indian culture.
Deliverable Countries : This product ships to
(less)Kamasutra
The philosophical implications and the opinions it expresses, reflect attitudes of the historical period in which it was written. Vatsayana read and considered the works of ancient authors and compiled the Kamasutra while he was leading the life of a religious student.
This abridged and edited version of the ancient literary Classic is richly illustrated with Tarun Chopra's photographs of the works of artists who were inspired by Vatsayana. They state that human life must concern itself with the religious, sexual and artistic experience.
The miniature paintings in this book have been taken from various private collections, while the sculptures have been taken from the various ancient and medieval temples spread across the Indian sub-continent
(less)The Kamasutra
, the Kama Sutra explores sexuality as an integral part of human existence. Arguing that happiness and moral duty (dharma) depend on elaborate social ritual to satisfy the essential needs of life, the Kama Sutra describes the practices, rituals, and lore of the erotic (kama) in human relations, both straight and gay.
The only truly authentic, complete translation from the ancient Sanskrit, this definitive and beautifully designed edition places this enduring work in its true historical, cultural, and religious context as a celebration of courtship and love. In addition to its famous catalog of positions, or "embraces," it features Vatsyayana's most edifying revelations on sexuality, women, marriage, pleasure, and more.
A complete glossary of Sanskrit terms
(less)Kamasutra
A fines del siglo XIX fue traducida por sir Richard Burton, el famoso explorador y viajero. De las distintas ediciones que se han hecho de esta obra maestra del erotismo, ninguna rene las excepcionales caractersticas de esta, tanto por su lujosa presentacin como por la cuidada seleccin de sus ilustraciones para favorecer la ms cabal compresin del texto.
Todo un esfuerzco de documentacin que se acompaa de textos explicativos sobre el marco en que fueron creadas
(less)Kamasutra
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