Society in the Atharvaveda Kharade B S
Material type:
- 8124600937
- 294.59215046 K5277 S 21313
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() |
Chinmaya International Foundation | 294.59215046 K5277 S 21313 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 21313 |
Of the Vedas the Atharvaveda, the Veda of the masses, is unique. Unlike the Rgveda, Samaveda and Yajurvedas, the Atharvaveda delineates the life of the common man in the ancient Indian Village community-the village farmer, craftsman and others who formed the core of the agriculturist society of the time. Modern scholarship has focused much on the vedatrayi but little has been written on the Atharvaveda.
Society in the Atharvaveda not only attempts to address the dearth of scholarlystudies on the Atharvaveda ut it is also perhaps, in recent years the first ever study of the Atharvaveda from the point of view of the common people. The Atharvavedic verses throw light upon a wide range of themes and all these are discussed here: topics from farming and cattle breeding, village crafts, religion, daily preoccupations and fashions of the people, role of women and their problems in day-to-day life. crime and degenerative practices like adultery and gambling, to trade and travel means and routes, loan facility, taxation, political administration and man's response to his environment. The author traces this Veda as the source of many traditional folk songs that are sung even today by the common man at work in the villages. This systematic survey dispels the widespread notion that the Atharvaveda is subordinate to the Vedatrayi: rather the author shows that is occupies an unrivaled importance in Vedic literature largely owing to its preoccupation with the life of the people at large.
There are no comments on this title.