By William Dalrymple
There is nothing new about
The man who commissioned the sculptures was King Mahendra, a ruler of the Pallava dynasty who reigned from 590 to 630 AD. He wrote two lost treatises on south Indian painting and music, and several plays-one of which, a cynical and sophisticated satirical farce called The Drunken Courtesan, tells the story of an alcoholic worshiper of Shiva and his courtesan-lover who get into an argument with a tipsy Buddhist monk over a drinking bowl left lying in front of a bar.
The same playful mind that can be sensed in Mahendra's plays can be seen in the dynastic sculptures commissioned a little inland from Mamallapuram, at the Pallava capital of Kanchipuram: here we see the ladies of the court riding on elephants under crimson parasols; messengers arrive breathless at halls packed with courtiers; ambassadors from
It is this characteristic mix of courtly sensuality and intense spirituality that is arguably the most striking aspect of south Indian sculpture, as could be seen from last year's major exhibition of south Indian bronzes at the Royal Academy of Arts in
There is something wonderfully frank and direct about these gods who embody human desire. Lord Shiva reaches out and fondly touches the breast of his consort, Uma-Parvati, a characteristically restrained Chola way of hinting at the immense erotic powers of a god who embodies male fertility. Elsewhere, Hindu sculpture can often be explicitly and unembarrassedly erotic, as can much classical Hindu poetry: Kalidasa's poem The Birth of Kumara has an entire canto of 91 verses titled 'The Description of Uma's Pleasure', which describes in graphic detail the lovemaking of the divine couple.
Sexuality in
Daud Ali's recent Courtly Culture and Political Life in Early Mediaeval India maintains that the erotic was a central element in plays and books of manners as well. Erotic love, he writes, was also indisputably the key theme of the vast literary corpus that has come down to us in Sanskrit. It formed the central topic of every single court drama, save one, that has survived from the fourth to the ?seventh centuries.
Classical
Doniger's Kamasutra proved to be a revelation, showing that the text was central to understanding classical Indian society. The Kamasutra was not just about acrobatic sexual positions as many had assumed; it was instead a sophisticated guide for the courtly paramour to the maze of ancient Indian social relationships and, as Doniger put it, the art of living-about finding a partner, maintaining power in a marriage, committing adultery, living as or with a courtesan and using drugs.
The Kamasutra was aimed at an urbane and cosmopolitan courtly class, and was intended as a guide to the life, sensibility, moods, and experience of pleasure, "not merely sexual", writes Doniger, "but more broadly sensual-music, good food, perfume, and so forth". Recently, the Kamasutra has been the subject of an elegant and stylish non-academic study by James McConnachie. His Book of Love not only tells the story of how and where the book came to be compiled, but paints an enticing picture of the society in which it was written, and follows the fate of the book from classical India through its translation by the Victorian explorer Richard Burton to the present.
As McConnachie makes clear, the Kamasutra was in many ways an act of resistance against the growing tide of Hindu and Buddhist ascetic puritanism that was beginning to question the libertine lifestyle of the third-century nagarikas-or young men about town-at whom the text was aimed.
If the Kamasutra has traditionally been
White's thesis is that the ideas behind common western conceptions of Tantric sex-that sexual passion can be harnessed for cultivating a state of ecstatic consciousness similar to the bliss experienced in orgasm-have some connection with late Kashmiri writings on the subject; but they have very little connection with the central Tantric corpus of writings, which date from the seventh century, and which are quite different and much more darkly ?cultic in tone.
At the root of Tantra lies the idea of reaching God through opposition to the polite and fashionable conventions of the sort embraced by Vatsyayana's nagarikas. Whereas caste Hindus believed that purity and good living were safeguarded by avoiding meat and alcohol, by keeping away from unclean places like cremation grounds and avoiding polluting substances such as bodily fluids, Tantrics believed that one path to salvation lies in inverting these strictures. In this way they sexualised religious ritual through the oral ingestion of sexual fluids that were believed to give the devotee access to the goddess's supernatural and occult powers, so giving the initiate victory over all worldly enemies. The elaborate scenes of group and oral sex displayed on the walls of the temples erected by the Chandela Rajputs at Khajuraho may well illustrate such rituals.
Tantric devotees took their lead in these matters from the great Tantric goddesses Kali, Tara, and Bhairavi. These are fierce and wilfully heterodox goddesses who cut off their own heads, who are offered blood sacrifices by their devotees, and who have sex with corpses while pulling the tongue of a demon or straddling the dead as they sit on a burning cremation pyre. Esoteric Tantric rituals and practices-or sadhana-were always the closely guarded secrets of a small group of initiates. But certainly in their modern form among the Bauls of Bengal who still practise similar rites-they involve elaborate, ritualised sex, sometimes with menstruating women, combined with the ingestion of a drink compounded of semen, blood, and bodily fluids, so flouting and subverting a whole range of established orthodoxies ?and taboos.
The earliest Tantric rites apparently involved blood sacrifice on cremation grounds as a means of feeding a series of terrifying Tantric deities. Later there was a change of emphasis "towards a type of erotico-mystical practice" involving congress with the Yoginis, a group of powerful and predatory female divinities "located at a shifting threshold between the divine and the demonic". According to White, what he calls the "hard core" medieval Tantric tradition nearly died in
Islam brought with it to
At this period, too, a new specialist vocabulary of Urdu words and metaphors developed to express the poets' desires: the beloved's arms were likened to lotus stalks, her thighs to banana stems, her plaited hair to the Ganges, and her rumauli-a word that was coined to describe the faint line of down that runs down the centre of a woman's stomach, just below her navel-to the River Godavari.
Similar concerns inspired the ateliers of the miniaturists. In 18th century Delhi one of the later Mughal emperors, Muhammad Shah II, commissioned miniatures of himself making love to his mistress, while further south in Hyderabad the artists were producing miniatures that tapped into the old erotic pulse of pre-Islamic Indian art, and that were concerned above all with the Arcadia of the scented pleasure garden. Here courtesans as voluptuous as the nude apsaras attend bejewelled princes. Such images would be unthinkable anywhere else in the Islamic world.
Significantly, it was also in the less comprehensively Islamicised courts of the Deccan sultanates in south-central
It was not, therefore, during the Islamic period that the dramatic break with
However, there are signs of change. If surveys of sexual attitudes in Indian magazines are anything to go by, sexual mores are beginning to free up in modern
Dalrymple is an acclaimed author.
Courtesy: The Week http://week.manoramaonline.com
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