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One of the new publications in this issue, available again after many years, is Sri Aurobindo’s "Savitri": A Study of the Cosmic Epic by Prema Nandakumar. In the years since Savitri first came out in print, the poem has engendered numerous books, lectures, and seminars, all seeking to understand its profundity or appreciate the transcendent beauty of its poetry. This work, first published in 1962, was one of the early efforts. Notably, the author was the first student to take up Savitri as a doctoral study, and this book is substantially the same as the thesis for which she was awarded her PhD in 1961. In the Preface she acknowledges that as she worked on her thesis, she was fortunate to have recourse to the advice and encouragement of several respected Sri Aurobindo scholars: A. B. Purani, M. P. Pandit, K. D. Sethna, and, most notably, her father Prof. K. R. Srinivasa Iyengar. The book is now in its third edition, an indication of its enduring value to students of the poem. The first two editions (1962 and 1985) were titled A Study of "Savitri". The new title for this edition is drawn from the book's final chapter, a wide-ranging and erudite analysis of the poem in the context of world literature and the conventions of the epic genre. The author discusses many ways in which Savitri qualifies as a cosmic epic, but in the final pages she admits to the most powerful aspect: that Savitri is the vision and revelation of the very inner structure of the cosmos:
The next book, Centenary Tributes, varies completely in subject, style, and length from the 500-page work by Dr Nandakumar. Its subject is three short talks given on the birth centenaries of Nolini Kanta Gupta, Nirodbaran, and Amal Kiran. In these talks, which are naturally quite informal and of a personal nature, Manoj Das Gupta has offered some glimpses into the natures of these three rather well-known sadhaks of the Integral Yoga. He is careful to point out how each one faced and overcame his own difficulties in the sadhana through humility and surrender to the Divine Love. In the first talk, he quotes from one of Nolini-da’s journals from the early 1930s, a notebook where he confessed his weaknesses to Sri Aurobindo, placing himself “on the dissection table”. Here is an entry that characterises how sincerely he laid himself bare:
Manoj-da remarks that this total surrender of all aspects of his being, even the most recalcitrant and unpleasant, was Nolini-da’s secret to becoming a “wayfarer of the sunlit path”. The last two books are both compilations. Sri Aurobindo and the Mother on Collective Yoga was first published in 1974, at a time when young people all over the world were either looking for or actively engaged in collective movements espousing various ideals. The editor remarks that Sri Aurobindo had predicted in the early 1900s that a general collective movement would be a future step in humanity’s evolution. In one of the selections, from a conversation that took place on 21 August 1957, the Mother is responding to a question and explains:
In the other compilation, The Integral Human Existence, we find similar notes among the themes which the editors have chosen to develop. The texts drawn from the works of Sri Aurobindo and the Mother outline the nature of the modern world’s existential crisis and describe how mankind can find the key to its solution and move assuredly forward in an evolutionary ascension towards an integral human existence for the individual and the race.
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ENGLISH | |
Sri Aurobindo's Savitri
A Study of the Cosmic Epic | |
Now in its third edition, this study of Savitri has a wide scope. Part I sets the stage by looking briefly at Sri Aurobindo’s life and work and the place Savitri occupies there. Part II examines the poem canto by canto in all its elements: the epic story, the poetry, the philosophy, the mystic experiences, the yogic realisations, and Savitri’s final victory for the earth and man. Part III considers the significances of Savitri, as a legend and a symbol, as a continuing experiment in overhead poetry, as a cosmic epic in relation to human thought and experience across the ages. The detailed references, select bibliography, and index complete the work, which was the author’s PhD thesis. The book was out of print for a number of years. | |
Centenary Tributes
Manoj | |
This booklet is a collection of the talks given by Manoj Das Gupta on the occasions of the birth centenaries of Nolini Kanta Gupta in 1989, Nirodbaran Talukdar in 2003, and Amal Kiran in 2004. The affectionate tributes to these three respected sadhaks are marked by the speaker’s admiration for their humility in the practice of the Integral Yoga, and an appreciation for the sincerity, poignancy, and sense of humour that characterised their journeys on the path of sadhana. | |
Sri Aurobindo and The Mother on Collective Yoga
Compiled from the Works of Sri Aurobindo and the Mother | |
The passages in this compilation touch on several aspects of the collective side of the sadhana, such as the true meaning of a spiritual hierarchy, the conditions required to create a gnostic collectivity, the interdependence between the individual’s progress and that of the collectivity, and the value of collective prayer and meditation. They illustrate the fact that a representative group of aspiring souls is required for the complete realisation of the Integral Yoga and the manifestation of a new and transformed life. This is a new edition of the book, issued after many years. | |
The Integral Human Existence
In the words of Sri Aurobindo and The Mother | |
This compilation examines the quandary facing the modern world in its search for self-fulfilment, and affirms the discovery of the spirit within and the power of that spiritual self-knowledge as the key to an integral human existence for the individual and the human race. The compilers have organised the selected texts, drawn primarily from Sri Aurobindo’s The Life Divine and The Human Cycle, into sections of suggested themes. Beginning with a statement of the current crisis of human destiny, the extracts deal with the increasingly evident need for a spiritual solution to the crisis, the search for the truth behind the realities of life and matter, the transforming power of the supermind, and the nature of a future existence as fully conscious beings. | |
Introduction to Sri Aurobindo's Epic Poem Savitri
Words of Sri Aurobindo and the Mother | |
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BENGALI | |
Sri Suresh Chandra Rachana Sangraha Part 3
Suresh Chandra Chakravarty | |
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Sri Suresh Chandra Rachana Sangraha Part 4
Suresh Chandra Chakravarty | |
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Sri Aurobinder Savitri Upakhyan
Monibishnu Choudhury | |
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GUJARATI | |
Shri Ambubhai Purani
Sri Aravindana Agradoot | |
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SANSKRIT | |
Kathah Vichitrah
Radhikaranjan Das | |
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