BETWEEN ‘CELESTIAL MAIDEN’ AND ‘SACRED PROSTITUTE’: THE MYTH OF THE DEVA-DĀSĪ  IN THE IMAGINARY OF THE CONTEMPORARY INDIAN CLASSICAL DANCE PRACTITIONERS Cover Image

BETWEEN ‘CELESTIAL MAIDEN’ AND ‘SACRED PROSTITUTE’: THE MYTH OF THE DEVA-DĀSĪ IN THE IMAGINARY OF THE CONTEMPORARY INDIAN CLASSICAL DANCE PRACTITIONERS
BETWEEN ‘CELESTIAL MAIDEN’ AND ‘SACRED PROSTITUTE’: THE MYTH OF THE DEVA-DĀSĪ IN THE IMAGINARY OF THE CONTEMPORARY INDIAN CLASSICAL DANCE PRACTITIONERS

Author(s): ANGELICA MARINESCU
Subject(s): Theatre, Dance, Performing Arts
Published by: EDITURA ASE
Keywords: Devadasi; Mahari; Bhakti; medieval temple system; Indian Classical dance

Summary/Abstract: One of the most controversial discussions in the contemporary Indian arts environment remains the connection of the post-colonial classical dance practice with the Devad􀆗s􀆯 or the Mahar􀆯, the temple dancing girls. Born in the Early Medieval India, amidst and in close connection to the Bhakti and the Tantric movements, abiding in the temple institution, the socalled ‘Devad􀆗s􀆯 temple system’ remains a mystery, between awe and fascination to the nowadays practitioner and connaisseur of Indian arts. While tracing back the socio-religious contexts that brought the temple dancers on the foremost place of the stage of Indian art history, the author looks for the understanding of this myth in the imaginary and the reality of contemporary practitioners, from the perspective of a foreigner researcher-cumpractitioner of an Indian art form. The paper is based on consulting the existing literary sources concerning the Devad􀆗s􀆯 system, and the research is focusing on the nowadays classical dance practitioners’ imaginary (re)construction(s) of this system. Till today, here she stands, the woman-as-dance practitioner, either Indian or from any other part of the world, at the cross-road of all myths, imaginarily rooted in the past, but living all the aspirations of the nowadays social, cultural, religious, political dynamics, neither celestial maiden, nor sacred prostitute.

  • Issue Year: 17/2021
  • Issue No: 1
  • Page Range: 56-73
  • Page Count: 18
  • Language: English