Afro-Asian Literature: Blept Review 2014
Afro-Asian Literature: Blept Review 2014
• Indian Literature
• Chinese Literature
• Japanese Literature
• African Literature
INDIAN LITERATURE
Brought by Aryans around 1500 BC
• nomads and highly poetic people
• worshipped the forces of nature
• extolled the hereditary deities
Agni (fire)
Savitri (sun)
Usas (dawn)
Rudras (storms)
Indra (war and rain)
Mitra (honor)
Varuna (divine authority)
Indra, Vishnu (creation)
INDIAN LITERATURE
• 6th century BC until abut AD 1000 was the
Classical Period
epics
court poems
dramas
THE INDIAN SCRIPTURES CAN BE BROADLY
CLASSIFIED INTO TWO CATEGORIES:
The Shruti literature
The Smriti literature.
Shruti is concerned with ‘the heard’ or ‘the
revealed’. Smriti is concerned with ‘the
remembered.’
The Vedas and the Upanishads are considered as
the Shruti literature. The Sanskrit root ‘ shrut’
means ‘to hear’.
Smriti literature is concerned with ‘that what is
remembered’; the literature which was based on the
knowledge acquired through the experience or the tradition.
The guidelines for ethics, moral obligations, social codes,
customs etc. are found in the Smriti literature.
The great epics Mahabharata and Ramayana also belong
to the Smriti literature.
INDIAN LITERATURE
The Rigveda
• ‘hymns of supreme sacred
knowledge’ or Samhita
• foremost collection (1,028 hymns)
• oldest of Vedas
• contains energetic hymns
• comparable to psalms
• regarded as divinely inspired or
heard directly from the gods
Rig-Veda – considered a scripture of pre-Hindu Vedic
religion. It is made up of Hymns praising the gods. It
represented the spirit of Aryan religiosity after they arrived
in India. The hymns are strong, energetic religious
expressions comparable to the Old Testament Psalms. The
Vedas are the most celebrated possessions of the
mankind. The Rig Veda is the oldest literary work in the
history of the world.
INDIAN LITERATURE
The Panchatantra
Confucius
CHINESE LITERATURE
Lao Tzu
CHINESE LITERATURE
Li po Tu Fu
Ssu-ma C’ien
CHINESE LITERATURE
Major Chinese Writers
T’ang Poets
Li Po Tu Fu Wang Wei
CHINESE LITERATURE
Major Chinese Writers