Philology and Criticism: A Guide to Mahbhrata Textual Criticism
By (Author) Vishwa Adluri
By (author) Joydeep Bagchee
1184
Anthem Press
Anthem Press
29th June 2018
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Prayer and prayer books
Hinduism
294
Hardback
568
Width 153mm, Height 229mm, Spine 26mm
454g
In the early twentieth century, one of the largest attempts at producing a critical edition of any text in any language began in India. Headed by V. S. Sukthankar, editors at the Bhandarkar Institute proposed producing a critical edition of the Sanskrit Mahabharata, a text that in its vulgate or popular edition spans nearly one hundred thousand verses. This book is the story of what this critical edition tells us about the science of textual criticism, and how that science was used (and sometimes abused). By exposing and critiquing many misconceptions regarding the Mahabharata critical edition (above all, those of Andreas Bigger and Reinhold Grunendahl), this book aims to provide readers not only with a guide to this edition but also with an assessment of its true place in intellectual history. Extensive appendices, detailed drawings of stemmata, and discussions of the basic principles at work in different contexts make this book an essential resource for the student of the Mahabharata as well as of textual and literary criticism.
Vishwa Adluri has a PhD in Philosophy from the New School and a PhD in Indology from Philipps-Universitat Marburg. He is Adjunct Associate Professor of Religion at Hunter College. Joydeep Bagchee has a PhD in Philosophy from the New School and is a Fellow at the research program Zukunftsphilologie: Revisiting the Canons of Textual Scholarship at the Freie Universitat Berlin.