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Lecture | VVIK lecture

Woodworkers and farmers 3000 years ago: transitions from the Rigveda to the Atharvaveda

Date
Thursday 18 January 2024
Time
Explanation
The lecture will be followed by drinks in the basement of Matthias de Vrieshof 3
Location

Room
0.05
At the workshop of Balaji, a wood-carver from the Vishwakarma community in Pondicherry (photo taken by Balaji and shared with the speaker, November 2012)

Abstract

Although Vedic ritual poetry might not be an ideal source for the socioeconomic history of ancient South Asia, the hymns of the Ṛgveda and the Atharvaveda do give meaningful information about agriculture and woodworking, two types of work still important in India today. If the information gleaned from each of these two hymn-collections is compared keeping in mind their relative chronology, a clear transition can be observed in the way agricultural labour is organized, and in the social identity and status of labourers. Woodworking seems to undergo less of an observable transition in its organization; however, the social status and attributed behavior of woodworkers becomes more complex. An examination of the relevant passages will show the nature of these developments and also some related issues which remain obscure.

Carmen Sylvia Spiers

After obtaining her PhD (2020) from the École Pratique des Hautes Études (Paris) and having lived four years in India affiliated with the French Institute of Pondicherry, Carmen is now a Marie Sklodowska-Curie (MSCA) post-doctoral fellow at the Leiden University Centre for Linguistics. Her project “His Enemies, Her Rivals: Gendered Expressions of Hostility in Ancient Indian Ritual Speech and Action, 1000 B⁠.C⁠.E⁠.” (GHost) involves the edition from manuscripts of new Vedic curse hymns of the Paippalāda school of the Atharvaveda as well as a translation and study of the abhicāra or hostile ritual chapter of the Atharvaveda’s oldest ritual manual, the Kauśikasūtra.

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