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The Ramayana
(The Way of Rama)
Ramayana

              Author: Valmiki
              Culture: Indian
              Language: Sanskrit
              Genre: epic poetry
              Time: 550 B.C.
              Names to know: Rama,
               Sita, Ravana,
               Hanuman, Dasaratha,
               Laksmana
              Concept: dharma
Valmiki

   Valmiki is celebrated as the „first poet‟ and the
    Ramayana as the „first poem.‟
   The poem begins with the sage Valmiki himself
    inventing metrical verse and asking the question:
    “Who is the perfect man?”
   The sage Narada responds with the story of Rama,
    whose wife had been abducted by a demon-king.
   The poet is one who transforms raw emotion and
    the chaos of real life into an ordered work of art.
Rama

          Rama is the hero of
           the tale. Portrayed as
           the seventh
           incarnation of the
           God Vishnu, he is the
           eldest and favorite
           son of the King of
           Ayodhya, Dasharatha
           , and his
           wife Kausalya.
The God Vishnu

•   One part of Hindu trinity
    - Shiva & Brahma
•   Positive Qualities
    - Loves Man
    - Selfless
•   Powers
    - Creates, Preserves &
        Destroys
•   Protector of dharma
Vishnu

            The Preserver of
             Life
Lakshmana

               Lakshmana, the younger
                brother of Rama, who
                chose to go into exile with
                him. He is portrayed as
                an incarnation of
                the Shesha, the nāga
                associated with the God
                Vishnu. He spends his
                time protecting Sita and
                Rama during which he
                fought the
                demoness Surpanakha.
Sita

          Sita is the beloved
           wife of Rama and
           the daughter of king
           Janaka. She is the
           incarnation of
           Goddess Lakshmi,
           the consort of
           Vishnu. Sita is
           portrayed as the
           epitome of female
           purity and virtue
Sita in the Palace of Ravana
Hanuman      Hanuman is
              a vanara belonging to
              the kingdom of
              Kishkindha. He is
              portrayed as an
              incarnation of the
              God Vayu (He is also
              called Rudra) and an
              ideal bhakta of Rama.
              He is born as the son of
              Kesari, a vanara king,
              and the Goddess
              Anjana. He plays an
              important part in locating
              Sita and in the ensuing
              battle.
Sugriva
Ravana      Ravana, a rakshasa, is the
             king of Lanka. After
             performing severe
             penance for ten thousand
             years he received a boon
             from the creator-
             God Brahma: he could
             henceforth not be killed by
             Gods, demons, or spirits.
             He is portrayed as a
             powerful demon king who
             disturbs the penances
             of Rishis. Vishnu
             incarnates as the human
             Rama to defeat him, thus
             circumventing the boon
             given by Brahma.
Ravana abducting Sita
Themes
   The nature of heroism / Hero‟s journey
   Gender roles
   Natural social hierarchies [Caste]
   How to live a good life (according to dharma:
    right action, sacred duty according to one‟s
    social role, status, and gender)
Moral Exemplars

                     The poem has had
                      powerful effects on
                      people‟s behavior in
                      South Asia. Rama, Sita,
                      Laksmana have been
                      held up as models of
                      behavior. Public
                      performances revolve
                      around the questions:
                         Why did Rama do this?
                         Was Sita right in doing
                          that?
Moral Problems/Obedience

   Texts have arisen cataloguing the moral
    quandaries of the story, and public recitation
    and exegesis are often developed on the
    basis of such lists.
   The Ramayana explores the problem of
    authority and obedience.
       It is the necessity of obedience
        that the poem emphasizes, rather
        than the quality of the authority that
        demands it.
Background

   This is the oldest literary version of the tale of the
    exile and adventures of Rama, a story that goes
    back in folk traditions to the 7th c. BC.
   It is probably that Valmiki, like
    Homer, gathered up other versions
    of the oral tale and shaped it.
   This is the great story of Indian
    civilization, the one narrative that
    Indians have known and loved
    since the 7th c. BC and which
    remains very popular today.
Rama
   Rama‟s epithet: devoted to righteousness –
    part of the oral tradition
   He is associated with the line of Iksvaku
    kings who ruled the kingdom of Kosala
       Like Hymn to the Sun, establishes authority
   The epic blends historical
    saga, creation myth, morality
    tale, and religious mythology.
Narrative Structure

   Book 1: an account of Rama‟s childhood; this is an
    addition to the original text which frames the central
    narrative. It introduces Rama as a divine
    incarnation, an avatar of Vishnu.
   Books 2-6: form the core of the epic; Rama as a
    wandering hero avenging bride theft. Monster-
    slayer.
   Book 7: an addition that completes the story of
    Rama as an avatar. The suffering of Sita.
Core Story

   Ravana, the 10-headed
    powerful king of the
    Raksasas (demons who
    threaten the world and
    moral order [dharma]) has gotten a boon of
    invulnerability to gods, demigods, and animals.
   The gods persuade Vishnu, whose function it is
    to preserve dharma, to incarnate himself as a
    man in order to destroy Ravana.
The Avatars
   Vishnu incarnates as Rama, son of Dasaratha, king
    of Kosala, and his senior wife Kausalya.
       Rama is a paragon of princely virtues.
   Sons are also born at
    the same time to lesser wives:
    Kaikeyi bore Bharata, Sumitra
    bore the twins Laksmana and
    Satrughna. These sons all share
    in Vishnu‟s divine essence.
   Sita is avatar of Lakshmi, wife of Vishnu
       Sita symbolizes an ideal daughter, wife, mother, and queen
Rama’s Heroism
    Rama‟s heroism lies in both his acts and his attitude

   A man‟s fundamental duty: to honor his father‟s word.
    Rama does this without anger.
   Rama‟s heroism combines the strong sense of duty and
    dedication to social responsibility demanded of an ideal
    king and the ideal member of the structured Hindu social
    order.
     Gandhi admired Rama as his personal

       hero and the personification of the
       ideal man.
Sita’s Heroism

   Her role is focused on her
    conduct as wife: a woman‟s
    dharma is to obey her
    husband.
       She is the exemplar of the
        good wife for Hindu culture,
        much as Penelope was for Greek culture.
   Women were men‟s property; sexual fidelity
    to their husbands was the major virtue of
    women.
Sita’s Troubles

   Still, Valmiki‟s account implies that Sita‟s own
    willful actions - coveting the golden deer and
    persuading her male relatives to leave her
    unguarded - led to what happens afterward.
        Her kidnapping and
        imprisonment, as well
        as Rama‟s eventual
        rejection of her.
Sita’s Revenge

   After Rama slays Ravana and rescues Sita, he asks
    her to prove her sexual purity with trial by fire.
   She emerges triumphant and the two return home.
    However, continuing public doubt leads him to
    banish her to the forest.
   Later, she refuses to rejoin Rama, expressing her
    anger by committing a kind of ritual suicide.
Cultural Values


   The male authors of Hindu legal and ritual texts
    wrote that men had to be guardians over women to
    ensure the legitimacy of the family line.
   A woman‟s uncontrolled sexuality could bring
    dishonor and ruin to her family.
   Marriage was arranged soon after puberty, for each
    menstrual cycle was seen as a lost opportunity for
    producing a son.
   However, in the epic we do see women such as Sita
    making choices about their own lives.
       Sita is a heroine in her own right
1.    Who is Rama? Describe his characteristics?
2.    Who are the brothers of Rama?
3.    Who is Sita? Describe her characteristics?
4.    What is the conflict in play?
5.    What happened to Sita?
6.    Who helped Rama in his quest to save Sita?
7.    Who is Ravana? Describe him.
8.    Who is the seventh Avatar of Vishnu?
9.    How is the conflict resolved in the story?
10.   What is the setting of the play?

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Lecture on ramayana (afro asian lit)

  • 2. Ramayana  Author: Valmiki  Culture: Indian  Language: Sanskrit  Genre: epic poetry  Time: 550 B.C.  Names to know: Rama, Sita, Ravana, Hanuman, Dasaratha, Laksmana  Concept: dharma
  • 3. Valmiki  Valmiki is celebrated as the „first poet‟ and the Ramayana as the „first poem.‟  The poem begins with the sage Valmiki himself inventing metrical verse and asking the question: “Who is the perfect man?”  The sage Narada responds with the story of Rama, whose wife had been abducted by a demon-king.  The poet is one who transforms raw emotion and the chaos of real life into an ordered work of art.
  • 4. Rama  Rama is the hero of the tale. Portrayed as the seventh incarnation of the God Vishnu, he is the eldest and favorite son of the King of Ayodhya, Dasharatha , and his wife Kausalya.
  • 5.
  • 6. The God Vishnu • One part of Hindu trinity - Shiva & Brahma • Positive Qualities - Loves Man - Selfless • Powers - Creates, Preserves & Destroys • Protector of dharma
  • 7. Vishnu  The Preserver of Life
  • 8. Lakshmana  Lakshmana, the younger brother of Rama, who chose to go into exile with him. He is portrayed as an incarnation of the Shesha, the nāga associated with the God Vishnu. He spends his time protecting Sita and Rama during which he fought the demoness Surpanakha.
  • 9. Sita  Sita is the beloved wife of Rama and the daughter of king Janaka. She is the incarnation of Goddess Lakshmi, the consort of Vishnu. Sita is portrayed as the epitome of female purity and virtue
  • 10. Sita in the Palace of Ravana
  • 11. Hanuman  Hanuman is a vanara belonging to the kingdom of Kishkindha. He is portrayed as an incarnation of the God Vayu (He is also called Rudra) and an ideal bhakta of Rama. He is born as the son of Kesari, a vanara king, and the Goddess Anjana. He plays an important part in locating Sita and in the ensuing battle.
  • 13. Ravana  Ravana, a rakshasa, is the king of Lanka. After performing severe penance for ten thousand years he received a boon from the creator- God Brahma: he could henceforth not be killed by Gods, demons, or spirits. He is portrayed as a powerful demon king who disturbs the penances of Rishis. Vishnu incarnates as the human Rama to defeat him, thus circumventing the boon given by Brahma.
  • 15. Themes  The nature of heroism / Hero‟s journey  Gender roles  Natural social hierarchies [Caste]  How to live a good life (according to dharma: right action, sacred duty according to one‟s social role, status, and gender)
  • 16. Moral Exemplars  The poem has had powerful effects on people‟s behavior in South Asia. Rama, Sita, Laksmana have been held up as models of behavior. Public performances revolve around the questions:  Why did Rama do this?  Was Sita right in doing that?
  • 17. Moral Problems/Obedience  Texts have arisen cataloguing the moral quandaries of the story, and public recitation and exegesis are often developed on the basis of such lists.  The Ramayana explores the problem of authority and obedience.  It is the necessity of obedience that the poem emphasizes, rather than the quality of the authority that demands it.
  • 18. Background  This is the oldest literary version of the tale of the exile and adventures of Rama, a story that goes back in folk traditions to the 7th c. BC.  It is probably that Valmiki, like Homer, gathered up other versions of the oral tale and shaped it.  This is the great story of Indian civilization, the one narrative that Indians have known and loved since the 7th c. BC and which remains very popular today.
  • 19. Rama  Rama‟s epithet: devoted to righteousness – part of the oral tradition  He is associated with the line of Iksvaku kings who ruled the kingdom of Kosala  Like Hymn to the Sun, establishes authority  The epic blends historical saga, creation myth, morality tale, and religious mythology.
  • 20. Narrative Structure  Book 1: an account of Rama‟s childhood; this is an addition to the original text which frames the central narrative. It introduces Rama as a divine incarnation, an avatar of Vishnu.  Books 2-6: form the core of the epic; Rama as a wandering hero avenging bride theft. Monster- slayer.  Book 7: an addition that completes the story of Rama as an avatar. The suffering of Sita.
  • 21. Core Story  Ravana, the 10-headed powerful king of the Raksasas (demons who threaten the world and moral order [dharma]) has gotten a boon of invulnerability to gods, demigods, and animals.  The gods persuade Vishnu, whose function it is to preserve dharma, to incarnate himself as a man in order to destroy Ravana.
  • 22. The Avatars  Vishnu incarnates as Rama, son of Dasaratha, king of Kosala, and his senior wife Kausalya.  Rama is a paragon of princely virtues.  Sons are also born at the same time to lesser wives: Kaikeyi bore Bharata, Sumitra bore the twins Laksmana and Satrughna. These sons all share in Vishnu‟s divine essence.  Sita is avatar of Lakshmi, wife of Vishnu  Sita symbolizes an ideal daughter, wife, mother, and queen
  • 23. Rama’s Heroism Rama‟s heroism lies in both his acts and his attitude  A man‟s fundamental duty: to honor his father‟s word. Rama does this without anger.  Rama‟s heroism combines the strong sense of duty and dedication to social responsibility demanded of an ideal king and the ideal member of the structured Hindu social order.  Gandhi admired Rama as his personal hero and the personification of the ideal man.
  • 24. Sita’s Heroism  Her role is focused on her conduct as wife: a woman‟s dharma is to obey her husband.  She is the exemplar of the good wife for Hindu culture, much as Penelope was for Greek culture.  Women were men‟s property; sexual fidelity to their husbands was the major virtue of women.
  • 25. Sita’s Troubles  Still, Valmiki‟s account implies that Sita‟s own willful actions - coveting the golden deer and persuading her male relatives to leave her unguarded - led to what happens afterward.  Her kidnapping and imprisonment, as well as Rama‟s eventual rejection of her.
  • 26. Sita’s Revenge  After Rama slays Ravana and rescues Sita, he asks her to prove her sexual purity with trial by fire.  She emerges triumphant and the two return home. However, continuing public doubt leads him to banish her to the forest.  Later, she refuses to rejoin Rama, expressing her anger by committing a kind of ritual suicide.
  • 27. Cultural Values  The male authors of Hindu legal and ritual texts wrote that men had to be guardians over women to ensure the legitimacy of the family line.  A woman‟s uncontrolled sexuality could bring dishonor and ruin to her family.  Marriage was arranged soon after puberty, for each menstrual cycle was seen as a lost opportunity for producing a son.  However, in the epic we do see women such as Sita making choices about their own lives.  Sita is a heroine in her own right
  • 28. 1. Who is Rama? Describe his characteristics? 2. Who are the brothers of Rama? 3. Who is Sita? Describe her characteristics? 4. What is the conflict in play? 5. What happened to Sita? 6. Who helped Rama in his quest to save Sita? 7. Who is Ravana? Describe him. 8. Who is the seventh Avatar of Vishnu? 9. How is the conflict resolved in the story? 10. What is the setting of the play?