Friday, 12 September 2025

Iks assignment

🔹Parmar Khushi j

🔹SY BA English 

🔹Maharani shree nandkuvarba art and commerce college 

🔹Iks 

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                Class assignment 


◾Topic: Dhvani Theory of Ānandavardhana


🔹Introduction

Indian literary criticism has a rich and unique heritage. Among the various theories of poetics, the Dhvani theory proposed by Ānandavardhana (9th century CE) is considered revolutionary. He explained that the true essence of poetry lies not merely in words (śabda) or literal meaning (artha), but in what is suggested (dhvani). This theory brought a new dimension to aesthetics and became the foundation for later scholars like Abhinavagupta.


🔹Meaning of Dhvani


The word Dhvani literally means sound, resonance, or echo.


In poetics, it means the suggestive power of words beyond their direct and figurative meanings.


According to Ānandavardhana, poetry (kāvya) achieves its highest beauty only through this suggestion (vyañjanā śakti).


🔹Background


Earlier thinkers like Bharata (Nāṭyaśāstra) emphasized Rasa as the soul of poetry.


Later, Bhamaha and Dandin discussed figures of speech (alaṅkāra) as central to poetry.


Ānandavardhana criticized this view, saying that mere ornamentation cannot create great poetry.


In his work Dhvanyāloka, he systematically presented Dhvani theory.


◾Types of Dhvani


Ānandavardhana classifies Dhvani into three types:


🔹1. Vastu-dhvani (suggestion of idea/concept)


When poetry suggests something beyond the literal meaning of words.


Example: Indirectly praising a king by describing a lion.


🔹2. Alaṅkāra-dhvani (suggestion of figures of speech)


When suggestion highlights an alaṅkāra (metaphor, simile, etc.).


Example: "The moon of your face rises in the sky of my heart." (suggesting metaphor).


🔹3. Rasa-dhvani (suggestion of aesthetic experience)


Considered the highest form of Dhvani.


When poetry suggests an emotion (rasa) that touches the reader’s soul.


Example: A verse describing separation may evoke karuṇa-rasa (pathos) beyond words.


◾Vyañjanā: The Power of Suggestion


Ānandavardhana explains that suggestion works through a unique power of language called Vyañjanā.


Just as words have abhidhā (denotation) and lakṣaṇā (connotation), they also have vyañjanā (suggestion).


This vyañjanā makes poetry subtle, deep, and emotionally powerful.



◾Importance of Rasa in Dhvani Theory


For Ānandavardhana, the ultimate aim of poetry is the realization of Rasa.


Rasa-dhvani is superior because it provides an aesthetic experience (rasānubhava), not just intellectual meaning.


Thus, Rasa becomes the soul of poetry, while Dhvani is the vehicle through which it is expressed.


Example (Illustration)


A famous verse:

"Her face is pale, eyes wet, lips trembling… though she utters no word, her silence speaks of sorrow."


Literal meaning → She is silent.


Suggested meaning (Dhvani) → Her silence expresses deep grief, evoking karuṇa-rasa.


◾Impact and Contribution


🔹1. Ānandavardhana shifted focus from ornamentation to essence of poetry.



🔹2. His theory gave rise to aesthetic criticism centered on emotions and experience.


🔹3. Abhinavagupta, in his commentary Locana, elaborated and defended the Dhvani theory.


🔹4. Modern scholars call it the most original contribution of Sanskrit poetics.


◾Conclusion


Ānandavardhana’s Dhvani Theory transformed Indian poetics by highlighting the role of suggestion and aesthetic experience. While figures of speech, meter, and grammar are important, the true soul of poetry lies in what is suggested and emotionally realized. This makes poetry not just a collection of words, but a medium of spiritual and aesthetic 


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                          Essay 

◼️Topic: Vakrokti Theory of Kuntaka


◾Introduction


Among the many schools of Indian poetics, Vakrokti theory proposed by Kuntaka (10th century CE) holds a significant place. His work Vakroktijīvita (“Life of Poetry is Oblique Expression”) presents the idea that the true beauty of poetry lies in Vakratā – a unique style of expression that deviates from the ordinary.

While Ānandavardhana emphasized Dhvani (suggestion), Kuntaka emphasized Vakrokti (oblique/creative expression). This brought an important stylistic dimension to Sanskrit literary criticism.


◾Meaning of Vakrokti


Vakra = crooked, indirect, deviated.


Ukti = expression, utterance.


Hence, Vakrokti means a mode of expression which is different from ordinary speech.


For Kuntaka, poetic language must be distinct, novel, artistic, not flat or straightforward.


◾Central Idea


The soul of poetry is not just meaning (artha) or figures (alaṅkāra), but Vakrokti.


It makes expression charming, creative, and fresh.


Just as Ānandavardhana said “Dhvani is soul of poetry”, Kuntaka said “Vakrokti is soul of poetry”.


◾Levels of Vakrokti


Kuntaka explains Vakrokti at six levels, showing how deviation and creativity can appear at different stages of poetic composition:


🔹1. Varṇavinyāsa-vakratā (Phonetic obliqueness)


Beauty achieved through arrangement of sounds, alliteration, rhyme, repetition.


Example: A verse where repetition of soft syllables creates a tender

 mood.



🔹2. Pada-pūrvārddha-vakratā (Lexical obliqueness)


Beauty of expression at the level of words.


Use of rare, sweet, or unusual words instead of ordinary vocabulary.


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Iks assignment

🔹Parmar Khushi j 🔹SY BA English  🔹Maharani shree nandkuvarba art and commerce college  🔹Iks  ___________________________________________...