WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
The Sanskrit drama cover

The Sanskrit drama

Chapter 128: Y
Open in WeRead

Explore more books like this:

About This Book

A scholarly study traces the origins, development, theory, and practice of classical Indian drama written in Sanskrit and Prākrit, examining ritual and Vedic antecedents, the Nāṭyaśāstra’s account of divine origin, and debates prompted by newly discovered early fragments. It analyzes major dramatists and representative plays through the first millennium, outlines technical principles of poetics and stagecraft—such as rasa, characterization, metre, and performance conventions—and distinguishes theoretical prescriptions from later imitative works. The author confines discussion to literary-dramatic traditions, omitting vernacular theatre, and emphasizes how textual confusion in sources complicates but also illuminates understanding of classical dramatic art.

[Contents]

Y

Yādavas, drama among the, 48, 49.

Yajñasena, a prince, 147.

Yakṣas, 266, 339, n. 3;
dress of, 366;
hair of, 367.

Yakṣīs, carry jewels, 367.

Yama and Yamī, dialogue of, 13, 14, 19, 20.

Yamala and Arjuna, demons, 99.

Yamunā, 245.

Yaçaḥpāla, author of the Moharājaparājaya, 254–6.

Yaçaçcandra, author of the Mudritakumudacandra, 260.

Yaçodā, wife of Nanda, 98.

Yaçodharman, conqueror of the Hūṇas, 144.

Yaçovarman, of Kanyakubja, as a dramatist, 186, 187, 220, 221, 222. [393]

Yāska, 15.

Yātrās, 16, 17, 40, 51, 272.

Yaugandharāyaṇa, 102, 103, 107, 108, 113, 171, 173, 220, 235, 240, 262.

Yavanas, 356, 366;
defeated by Vasumitra, 149;
Apabhraṅça assigned to, 336, n. 1;
see also Yavananīs.

Yavanīs, in king’s harem, 61, 62.

Yāyāvara family, 231.

Yudhājit, uncle of Bharata, 189.

Yudhiṣṭhira, oldest of the Pāṇḍavas, 83, 214, 215, 308.

Yugādideva, the Tīrthakara Ṛṣabha, 259.