Manimekalai: Dancer with Magic Bowl - Meghadutam: Cloud Messenger by Kalidasa (Tamil Thai & Kavya Purusha Prakrit Astonishing 2nd Century Luminaries Illustrated by Mahayana Buddhist Art
Contents: Preface. 1. Manimekalai - Dancer with Magic Bowl by Seethalai Satanar. 2. Silappadikaram - Anklet of Justice by Ilango Adigal. 3. Meghadutam - Cloud Messenger by Kalidasa. 4. Buddhist Jatakam - World of Prakrit Purusha. Bibliography. Index.
Four chapters on epics in Tamil and Prakrit Buddhist-Sanskrit engage with masterpieces in ancient literature that reflect the values, beliefs, and social customs of the Indo-Greek period. The noble Cloud Messenger in Meghadutam by Kalidasa carries a coded love note to Alaka in the Himalayas from an exiled Yaksha, a nature spirit liberated on Makar Sankranti. The interplay of astrological symbolism, myth, and romance offers renewal through the northward journey of the sun linked to enlightenment. Supernatural encounters in stunning landscapes enriched by early Buddhist material culture, aligned to the Tropic of Cancer, Uttarayan, and the cosmic energy of planets. Then, the exiled Bodhisattva Rama, embodiment of equanimity and detachment on the path to enlightenment, in the poetic Pali Dasaratha Jatakam, initiates versions of Ramayana. The turbulent Tamil epic Silappadikaram by Ilango Adigal is a prolog to Manimekhalai by Seethalai Satanar, reframing a spiritual journey in narrative verse dated to the 2nd century CE. The gendered tale of Manimekalai, daughter of a courtesan dancer, converted to selfless service, offers a rich socio-cultural landscape of South India and deals with emotional, ethical, religious, and mythological themes in Akam (inner) and Puram (external) worlds, dealing with Ananku or sacred, magical force inhabiting objects and landscapes in the famed Sangam Academy of Literature. Together, these beautifully illustrated works reveal a dynamic literary landscape introduced by Aramaic-derived Brahmi script where language, Buddhist, and Jain traditions converse with one another, enriched by exchanges with Greco-Roman culture, and where ethics, myths, and imagination converge to reproduce knowledge across generations.