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Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/The Foundations of Indian Culture/Indian Literature.htm
CHAPTER X
INDIAN LITERATURE
THE arts which appeal to the soul through the eye are able
to arrive at a peculiarly concentrated expression of the spirit,
the aesthesis and the creative mind of a people, but it is in its
literature that we must seek for its most flexible and many-sided self-expression, for it is the word used in all its power
of clear figure or its threads of suggestion that carries to us
most subtly and variably the shades and turns and teeming
significances of the inner self in its manifestation. The greatness of a literature lies first in the greatness and worth of its
substance, the value of its thought and the beauty of its forms,
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/The Foundations of Indian Culture/A Rationalistic Critic on Indian Culture.htm
II
A RATIONALISTIC CRITIC ON INDIAN CULTURE
CHAPTER I
WHEN we try to appreciate a culture, and when that
culture is the one in which we have grown up or from which we draw our governing
ideals and are likely from overpartiality to minimise its deficiencies or from
overfamiliarity to miss aspects or values of it which would strike an
unaccustomed eye, it is always useful as well as interesting to know how others
see it. It will not move us to change our view-point for theirs, but we can get
fresh light from a study of this kind and help our self-introspection. But there
are different ways of seeing a foreign civilis
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/The Foundations of Indian Culture/precontent.htm
PUBLISHERS' NOTE
The Foundations of Indian Culture comprises, under a single
connecting title, the series of articles that appeared in the
ARYA, from 15th December, 1918 to i5th January, 1921,
in the following sequence: "Is India Civilised?" (Vol. V.
No. 5 —Vol. V. No. 7), "A Rationalistic Critic on Indian
Culture" (Vol. V. No. 7—Vol. V. No. 12) and "A Defence of Indian Culture" (Vol. VI. No.
I-Vol. VII. No. 6). The
essays have since undergone revision by the author.
The essay "Indian Culture and External Influence"
which originally appeared in the ARYA Vol. V. No. 8,
has been appended to this volume as it bears on th
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/The Foundations of Indian Culture/Indian Polity.htm
CHAPTER XV
I HAVE spoken hitherto of the greatness of Indian civilisation
in the things most important to human culture, those activities that raise man to his noblest potentialities as a mental,
a spiritual, religious, intellectual, ethical, aesthetic being,
and in all these matters the cavillings of the critics break down
before the height and largeness and profundity revealed when
we look at the whole and all its parts in the light of a true
understanding of the spirit and intention and a close discerning
regard on the actual achievement of the culture. There is
revealed not only a great civilisation, but one of the half dozen greatest of which we have a still exi
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/The Foundations of Indian Culture/Indian Culture and External Influence.htm
INDIAN CULTURE AND EXTERNAL INFLUENCE
IN considering Indian civilisation and its renascence, I suggested
that a powerful new creation in all fields was our great need,
the meaning of the renascence and the one way of preserving
the civilisation. Confronted with the huge rush of modern life
and thought, invaded by another dominant civilisation, almost
her opposite or inspired at least with a Very different spirit to
her own, India can only survive by confronting this raw, new,
aggressive, powerful world with fresh diviner creations of her
own spirit, cast in the mould of her own spiritual ideals. She
must meet it by solving its greater problems
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/The Foundations of Indian Culture/The Issue Is India Civilised.htm
I
THE ISSUE
IS INDIA
CIVILISED ?
CHAPTER I
A Book under this rather startling title was published some
years ago by Sir John Woodroffe, the well-known scholar
and writer on Tantric philosophy, in answer to an extravagant
jeu d'esprit by Mr. William Archer. That well-known dramatic
critic leaving his safe natural sphere for fields in which his
chief claim to speak was a sublime and confident ignorance,
assailed the whole life and culture of India and even lumped
together all her greatest achievements, philosophy, religion,
poetry, painting, sculpture, Upanishads, Mahabharata,
Ramayana, in one wholesale condemnation as a repulsive mass
o
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/The Foundations of Indian Culture/Is India Civilised.htm
IS INDIA CIVILISED ?
CHAPTER II
THIS question of Indian
civilisation, once it has raised this greater issue, shifts from its narrow
meaning and disappears into a much larger problem. Does the future of humanity
lie in a culture founded solely upon reason and science ? Is the progress of
human life the effort of a mind, a continuous collective mind constituted by an
ever changing sum of transient individuals, that has emerged from the darkness
of the inconscient material universe and is stumbling about in it in search of
some clear light and some sure support amid its difficulties and problems ? And
does civilisation consist in man's endeavour t
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/The Foundations of Indian Culture/Indian Art.htm
CHAPTER VI
INDIAN ART
A GOOD deal of hostile or unsympathetic western criticism
of Indian civilisation has been directed in the past against
its aesthetic side and taken the form of a disdainful or violent
depreciation of its fine arts, architecture, sculpture and painting.
Mr. Archer would not find much support in his wholesale and
undiscriminating depreciation of a great literature, but here
too there has been, if not positive attack, much failure of
understanding : but in the attack on Indian art, his is the
last and shrillest of many hostile voices. This aesthetic side of
a people's culture is of the highest importance and demands
almost as much scrutiny
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/The Foundations of Indian Culture/Religion and Spirituality.htm
III
A DEFENCE OF INDIAN CULTURE
CHAPTER I
RELIGION AND SPIRITUALITY
I HAVE described the framework of the Indian idea from the outlook of an intellectual criticism, because that is the standpoint of the critics who affect to disparage its value." I have shown that Indian culture must be adjudged even from this alien outlook to have been the creation of a wide and noble spirit. Inspired in the heart of its being by a lofty principle, illumined with a striking and uplifting idea of individual manhood and its powers and its possible perfection, aligned to' a spacious plan of social architecture, it was enriched not only by a stro
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