title
 
Please see gallery for copyright information
Please see gallery for copyright information
Book: Acri, Creese, and Griffiths, eds., From Laṅkā Eastwards; The Rāmāyaṇa In Indonesia

 

FROM LAKĀ EASTWARDS; THE RĀMĀYAA IN THE LITERATURE AND VISUAL ARTS OF INDONESIA

Edited by Andrea Acri, Helen Creese and Arlo Griffiths.


Series: Verhandelingen 247
Leiden 2011
ISBN: 978 90 6718 384 0

The volume, published by KITLV Press, is available in both traditional and digital form. The digital book can be downloaded as a .pdf file via Open Access:

http://www.kitlv.nl/book/show/1314
http://www.oapen.org/search?identifier=399317

 

The Kakawin Ramayana, arguably the oldest Old Javanese epic text in Indic metres (circa 9th century AD), holds a unique position in the literary heritage of Indonesia. The poem has retained a remarkable vitality through the centuries in the Archipelago, inspiring many forms of artistic expression not only in the domain of literature but also in the visual and performing arts, from the reliefs of the majestic Central Javanese temples to modern puppet-show performances. 
Displaying a virtuoso array of metrical patterns, the Kakawin Ramayana is among the very few Old Javanese texts for which a specific Sanskrit prototype has been identified, namely the difficult poem Bhattikavya (circa 7th century AD), itself a version of the great Ramayana epic ascribed to Valmiki (circa 6th–1st century BC). The Old Javanese poem is an original and skillful work of re-elaboration that documents a fascinating interaction between cultural elements of the Sanskritic tradition with those indigenous to the Javanese setting. 
The studies included in this volume, written by experts in a wide range of disciplines, focus on disparate aspects of the Kakawin Ramayana and the constellation of cultural phenomena revolving around it, providing the reader with a key to the understanding of the rich Old Javanese textual heritage and the transcultural intellectual dynamics that contributed to shaping the cultural heritage of Indonesia up to the present.

 


CONTENTS
About the authors --- p. vii
Introduction --- p. xi

Part One: Old Javanese Kakawin and the Kakawin Rāmāyaa
1. Hymns of Praise in Kakawins; The Rāmāyaa and Other Examples --- p. 1 

 

Stuart Robson

2. Poetic Conventions as Opposed to Conventional Poetry? A Place for kavisamaya-ādi in Comparative Kāvya/Kakawin Studies ---p. 11 

 

Wesley Michel

3. Figures of Repetition (yamaka) in the Bhaṭṭikāvya, the Raghuvaśa, the Śiwagha Inscription and the Kakawin Rāmāyaa --- p. 25
Thomas Hunter

4. More on Birds, Ascetics and Kings in Central Java; Kakavin Rāmāyaa, --- p. 53 

 

Andrea Acri

5. Rāmāyaa Traditions in Bali --- p. 93
Helen Creese

6. The Old Javanese Kapiparwa and a Recent Balinese Painting --- p. 119 

 

Adrian Vickers

Part Two: The Rāmāyaa at Caṇḍi Prambanan and Caṇḍi Panataran
7. Imagine Lakapura at Prambanan --- p. 133
Arlo Griffiths

8. The Grand Finale; The Uttarakāṇḍa of the Loro Jonggrang Temple Complex --- p. 149
Cecelia Levin

9. The Causeway Episode of the Prambanan Rāmāyaa Reexamined --- p. 179
Roy Jordaan

10. Hanuman, the Flying Monkey; The Symbolism of the Rāmāyaa Reliefs at the Main Temple of Caṇḍi Panataran --- p. 209
Lydia Kieven

Abbreviations --- p. 223
Bibliography --- p. 235
Index --- p. 253

 
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