Roots of Wisdom, Branches of Devotion

Plant Life in South Asian Traditions

by Febrizio Ferrari, University of Chester and Thomas Dähnhardt, Ca’ Foscari University of Venice (Volume Editors)

COLLECTIONS:
Complete Collection
​South & East Asia Collection​

Selected Chapters​:​
AfroDiasporic & Indigenous Studies

Plant life has figured prominently in Indian culture. Archaeobotanical findings and Vedic texts confirm that plants have been central not only as a commodity (sources of food; materia medica; sacrificial matter; etc.) but also as powerful and enduring symbols. Roots of Wisdom, Branches of Devotion: Plant Life in South Asian Traditions explores how herbs, trees, shrubs, flowers and vegetables have been studied, classified, represented and discussed in a variety of Indian traditions such as Vedism, Hinduism, Jainism, Buddhism, indigenous cultures and Islam. Moving from an analysis of the sentience of plants in early Indian philosophies and scientific literature, the various chapters, divided in four thematic sections, explore Indian flora within devotional and mystic literature (bhakti and Sufism), mythological, ritual and sacrificial culture, folklore, medicine, perfumery, botany, floriculture and agriculture. Arboreal and floral motifs are also discussed as an expression of Indian aesthetics since early coinage to figurative arts and literary figures. Finally, the volume reflects current discourses on environmentalism and ecology as well as on the the place of indigenous flora as part of an ancient yet still very much alive sacred geography.

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This book is included in the Complete and South & East Asia Collections. Subscribers can access eBook from the Read Online tab.

Selected chapters are included in other collections as designated.

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