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  1. Love, Violence, and the Aesthetics of Disgust: Śaivas and Jains in Medieval South India. [REVIEW]Anne E. Monius - 2004 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 32 (2/3):113-172.
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  • Out of character: Marginal voices and role-transcendence in the mahābhārata's book of the forest. [REVIEW]JamesW Laine - 1991 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 19 (3):273-296.
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  • The learned Monk as a comic figure: On reading a buddhist vinaya as indian literature. [REVIEW]Gregory Schopen - 2007 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 35 (3):201-226.
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  • In karna's realm: An ontology of action. [REVIEW]William S. Sax - 2000 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 28 (3):295-324.
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  • Shifting Śāstric Śiva: Co-operating Epic Mythology and Philosophy in India’s Classical Period.Shubha Pathak - 2023 - International Journal of Hindu Studies 27 (2):173-212.
    This study accounts for disparate portrayals of divine destroyer Śiva in the normative Rāmāyaṇa and Mahābhārata as opposed to Kālidāsa’s amatory Kumārasaṃbhava and Raghuvaṃśa by contrasting the primary and secondary Sanskrit epic authors’ respective reliances on the Mānavadharmaśāstra and the Kāmasūtra. By arguing, per Richard Johnson’s postpoststructuralism, that these mythological and philosophical differences deliberately reflect those poets’ specific sociohistorical contexts, this inquiry accounts more accurately for Śiva’s classical-epic depictions than do Stella Kramrisch’s and Wendy Doniger [O’Flaherty]’s investigations informed by Claude (...)
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