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The central character of Divine Yet Human Epics is the developing
conception of epic itself. Its story unfolds as the ancient Greek
idea of epic originates with Pindar and Herodotus on the basis of
the Iliad and Odyssey. While this notion eventually leads their
Sanskrit counterparts, the Ramaya?a and Mahabharata, to be
understood selectively in modern times, medieval readers
Anandavardhana and Rajasekhara reveal distinctive features of these
ancient Indian poems earlier in this exegetical tale. Shubha
Pathak's interpretative account concludes with a new way to connect
these primary epics to their Greek analogues. Both epic pairs
feature poetic kings who together affirm and interrogate their
societies' central religious ideals: Greek kleos (or heroic glory,
which assuages uncertainty about the afterlife) and Indian dharma
(or righteousness, which counters encroaching immorality). The
Greek and Sanskrit epics, by showing both the divine ease and the
human difficulty with which kleos and dharma are achieved, employ
similar teaching strategies to address the shared psychological
needs of human beings learning to live within the disparate
cultures of ancient Greece and India. This cross-cultural
comparative study thus provides a more comprehensive perspective on
the poems' religiosity than the vantage points of Hellenists or of
Indologists alone.
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