表面上和表面之外

IF 0.5 0 ASIAN STUDIES
Leah Elizabeth Comeau
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In addition to soaring towers that punctuate its skyline, the South Indian landscape is also famous for being utterly packed with stone inscriptions, over a third of the total number of inscriptions known in India today. These tens of thousands of epigraphic “texts“ planted in the southern landscape have long been a rich field of study for historians of religion, politics, and economics in South Asia. Until the very recent past, inscriptions have been analyzed primarily if not exclusively for the denotative content of their texts as records of the past. In fact, most scholars of these sources encounter them as they are printed and published in the South Indian Inscriptions volumes produced by the Archaeological Survey of India. In this form, the inscriptions appear on a smooth page in blocks of text resembling narrative paragraphs. This type of reproduction erases a multitude of information that this special issue argues is essential to their interpretation. In situ, such texts might wrap around a slim slab of stone at the base of a shrine. They might be installed on a pillar set directly into the ground. In some cases, text is painted and illustrated. When these mostly stone writings are collected and printed on flat paper, unfortunately we scholars of inscriptions thereby inflict significant penalties on ourselves — erasures that are further replicated in these articles as we struggle with communicating the color, texture, and shape of billboards and murals in the virtual or printed form, which admittedly have their own aesthetic qualities. Over time, inscriptions and other temple texts have traveled and transformed in their material characteristics. Scholars who try to work back to the stone, to match printed inscriptions to their sites, are intently aware that over time combinations of renovations, cleanings, environmental forces, and preservation efforts have led to the damage and deterioration of sources. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

本期特刊“在表面上和表面之外:南印度寺庙的墙壁作为文本、对象和经验”是我在2016年德克萨斯州圣安东尼奥举行的美国宗教学会年会上组织的一个小组讨论的结果。自那次会议以来,我们的小组成员一直在进行持续的对话,现在很高兴地提出了一系列文章,这些文章提出了解读南印度宗教空间中无处不在的标志、壁画和铭文的新方法。印度教寺庙是一个宗教表达、体验和交流的地方。这些建筑被称为神的家或宫殿,或神的身体本身,这些建筑的特点是适合皇室的住宿。中世纪时期在印度东南部建造的宏伟的石头寺庙拥有长长的柱子大厅,装饰性雕塑和标志入口的雄伟大门。除了高耸的塔楼点缀着它的天际线,南印度的景观还以石刻碑铭而闻名,占印度今天已知碑铭总数的三分之一以上。这些种植在南方景观中的成千上万的铭文“文本”长期以来一直是南亚宗教,政治和经济历史学家研究的丰富领域。直到最近的过去,碑文的分析主要是,如果不是完全为其文本的外延内容作为过去的记录。事实上,大多数研究这些资料的学者都是在印度考古调查局出版的《南印度铭文》卷中看到它们的。在这种形式中,铭文以类似叙述段落的文本块出现在光滑的页面上。这种类型的复制抹去了本特刊认为对他们的解释至关重要的大量信息。在原址上,这些文字可能会包裹在神龛底部的一块薄薄的石板上。它们可能被安装在直接插入地面的柱子上。在某些情况下,文字是绘画和插图。当这些大部分是石头的文字被收集并印刷在平面纸上时,不幸的是,我们这些碑文学者因此对自己施加了重大的惩罚——当我们努力以虚拟或印刷的形式传达广告牌和壁画的颜色、纹理和形状时,这些擦掉在这些文章中被进一步复制,不可否认,它们有自己的审美品质。随着时间的推移,铭文和其他寺庙文本在其物质特征上已经旅行和转变。学者们试图回到石头上,将印刷的铭文与他们的遗址相匹配,他们非常清楚地意识到,随着时间的推移,翻修、清洁、环境力量和保护工作的结合导致了来源的破坏和退化。一些铭文已被重新安置、复制、掩埋、中断或喷砂。在某些情况下,石刻碑文被涂上或涂上漆,或者最近被悬挂的标志所隐藏。在彩色塑料或彩绘木材上出现的当代标志中,有一种生动性和生命力的感觉,提出了未来的奉献形式。然而,这些广告牌也与几个世纪以来刻在墙上和壁画上的收据和报告紧密相连。这些寺庙墙壁生活的动态方面使本期的作者解决了可见性和易读性之间明显的紧张关系。在某些情况下,两者都不可能!我们对壁画中文本和图像之间未被充分研究的关系进行了集体讨论,特别是,这促使我们每个人都重新审视了雕刻铭文中文本和图像之间的类似紧张关系,这些铭文通常只作为文本进行分析。通过重新考虑易读性和视觉意义的过程,我们的目标是对铭文进行更全面的解释,包括
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
On and Beyond the Surface
This special issue “On and beyond the surface: South Indian temple walls as text, object, and experience“ developed out of a panel that I organized at the American Academy of Religion Annual Meeting in San Antonio, TX, in 2016. Since that meeting, our group of panelists have been in continuous dialogue and are now delighted to present a collection of articles that propose fresh approaches to interpreting signs, murals, and inscriptions that are ubiquitous in South Indian religious spaces. The Hindu temple is a place of religious expression, experience, and exchange. Known as a home or palace for its god, or the god’s body itself, these structures feature accommodations fit for royalty. Grand stone temples built in the medieval period throughout southeast India boast long pillared halls, ornamental sculptures, and imposing gates that mark its entrances. In addition to soaring towers that punctuate its skyline, the South Indian landscape is also famous for being utterly packed with stone inscriptions, over a third of the total number of inscriptions known in India today. These tens of thousands of epigraphic “texts“ planted in the southern landscape have long been a rich field of study for historians of religion, politics, and economics in South Asia. Until the very recent past, inscriptions have been analyzed primarily if not exclusively for the denotative content of their texts as records of the past. In fact, most scholars of these sources encounter them as they are printed and published in the South Indian Inscriptions volumes produced by the Archaeological Survey of India. In this form, the inscriptions appear on a smooth page in blocks of text resembling narrative paragraphs. This type of reproduction erases a multitude of information that this special issue argues is essential to their interpretation. In situ, such texts might wrap around a slim slab of stone at the base of a shrine. They might be installed on a pillar set directly into the ground. In some cases, text is painted and illustrated. When these mostly stone writings are collected and printed on flat paper, unfortunately we scholars of inscriptions thereby inflict significant penalties on ourselves — erasures that are further replicated in these articles as we struggle with communicating the color, texture, and shape of billboards and murals in the virtual or printed form, which admittedly have their own aesthetic qualities. Over time, inscriptions and other temple texts have traveled and transformed in their material characteristics. Scholars who try to work back to the stone, to match printed inscriptions to their sites, are intently aware that over time combinations of renovations, cleanings, environmental forces, and preservation efforts have led to the damage and deterioration of sources. Some inscriptions have been relocated, recopied, buried, interrupted, or sandblasted away. In some cases, stone inscriptions are painted or lacquered over or have recently been hidden by hung signs. In the case of contemporary signs that appear in colorful plastic or painted wood, there is a sense of vividness and vitality that is generative, proposing future forms of devotion. Nevertheless, these billboards are also deeply tied to centuries of receipts and reports that are carved into the walls and incorporated into murals. These dynamic facets of the life of temple walls have led the authors of this issue to address the evident tension between visibility and legibility. In some case, neither are possible! Our collective discussion about the understudied relationship between text and image as it occurs in murals, in particular, drove each of us to revisit similar tensions between text and iconography in engraved inscriptions that are typically analyzed solely as text. Through the process of reconsidering legibility and visual meaning, we have aimed to develop more holistic interpretations of the inscriptions that include
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South Asian Studies
South Asian Studies ASIAN STUDIES-
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