Vol. 4 No. S-5 (2022): Volume 4, Issue S-5, Year 2022
Articles

Dravidian Aesthetics - the foremost of Indian Aesthetics

Kumaraguruparan R
School of Tamil and Cultural Studies, Tamil Nadu Open University, Chennai-600015, Tamil Nadu, India

Published 2022-08-25

Keywords

  • Dravidian Culture,
  • Thinai Kotpaadu,
  • Tamil Consciousness,
  • Tamil Aesthetics

How to Cite

R, K. (2022). Dravidian Aesthetics - the foremost of Indian Aesthetics. International Research Journal of Tamil, 4(S-5), 230-240. https://doi.org/10.34256/irjt22s536

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Abstract

The influences of contemporary events on the field of study and society on speakers of Dravidian languages such as Tamil indicate the primacy of Dravidian ideology. Scholars in other countries look at the functioning of the Dravidian movement in the political, social, and cultural spheres behind the Tamil aesthetics of Dravidian aesthetics being at the forefront of Indian aesthetics. The Czechoslovakian multi-linguist recalls in the interview the Sanskrit-Tamil linguistic exchanges, the unity, and other differences. The contribution of Dravidian culture to Indianization is revealed through the media interviews of Sri Lankan Tamil scholar Karthikesu Sivathambi. There is an explanation of the understanding of Tamil consciousness. Accordingly, the Dravidian movement developed by rejecting the Sanskrit tradition, the North Indian tradition, the Bhakti tradition, etc. Aside from religion, which is a feature of the past, the temple towers, the Nataraja image, the bhakti literature, etc., must be regarded as the active contribution of the Tamils, who were fully absorbed in Indian culture. These aspects were not adopted because of the atheistic, rationalist, and anti-Brahmin elements of the Dravidian movement. BC 100- AD 250 lays claim to Sangam literature, the Pre-Bhakti period literature. The central theme of the article was that the Dravidian movement regarded it as belonging to Tamils who did not have the Sanskrit tradition. It is understood that the contributions of Periyar and others led to the development of the Dravidian cultural ideology. Experts in other languages expound on Dravidian aesthetics. Malayalam scholar K. Ayyappa Panicker praises the Thinai doctrine of Tamil as a rare wealth of knowledge not found in the languages of the world. Not all Sanskrit language texts are based on the orthodox tradition they also include books.

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