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Ananda Coomaraswamy

Ananda Kentish Muthu Coomaraswamy (Tamil: ஆனந்த குமாரசுவாமி, Āṉanta Kentiś Muthū Kumāracuvāmi; Sinhala: ආනන්ද කුමාරස්වාමි Ānanda Kumārasvāmī; 22 August 1877 − 9 September 1947) was a Ceylonese metaphysician, historian and a philosopher of Indian art who was an early interpreter of Indian culture to the West.[4] In particular, he is described as "the groundbreaking theorist who was largely responsible for introducing ancient Indian art to the West".[5]

Ananda Kentish Coomaraswamy
Coomaraswamy in 1916
Born(1877-08-22)22 August 1877
Died9 September 1947(1947-09-09) (aged 70)
NationalityBritish Ceylonese American
Notable workThe Dance of Shiva (1918), Hinduism and Buddhism (1943)
Spouses
EraModern philosophy
20th-century philosophy
RegionIndian philosophy
Western philosophy
SchoolPerennialism
Traditionalist School
Main interests
metaphysics, philosophy of art, history

Life Edit

Ananda Kentish Coomaraswamy was born in Colombo, British Ceylon, now Sri Lanka, to the Ceylon Tamil legislator and philosopher Sir Muthu Coomaraswamy of the Ponnambalam–Coomaraswamy family and his English wife Elizabeth Beeby.[6][7][8] His father died when Ananda was two years old, and Ananda spent much of his childhood and education abroad.[9]

Coomaraswamy moved to England in 1879 and attended Wycliffe College, a preparatory school in Stroud, Gloucestershire, at the age of twelve. In 1900, he graduated from University College London (UCL), with a degree in geology and botany. On 19 June 1902, Coomaraswamy married Ethel Mary Partridge, an English photographer, who then traveled with him to Ceylon. Their marriage lasted until 1913. Coomaraswamy's field work between 1902 and 1906 earned him a doctor of science for his study of Ceylonese mineralogy, and prompted the formation of the Geological Survey of Ceylon which he initially directed.[10] While in Ceylon, the couple collaborated on Mediaeval Sinhalese Art; Coomaraswamy wrote the text and Ethel provided the photographs. His work in Ceylon fueled Coomaraswamy's anti-Westernization sentiments.[11] After their divorce, Partridge returned to England, where she became a famous weaver and later married the writer Philip Mairet.

By 1906, Coomaraswamy had made it his mission to educate the West about Indian art, and was back in London with a large collection of photographs, actively seeking out artists to try to influence. He knew he could not rely on museum curators or other members of the cultural establishment – in 1908 he wrote "The main difficulty so far seems to have been that Indian art has been studied so far only by archaeologists. It is not archaeologists, but artists ... who are the best qualified to judge of the significance of works of art considered as art." By 1909, he was firmly acquainted with Jacob Epstein and Eric Gill, the city's two most important early Modernists, and soon both of them had begun to incorporate Indian aesthetics into their work. The curiously hybrid sculptures that were produced as a result can be seen to form the very roots of what is now considered British Modernism.[12][13]

 
His second wife: Alice Coomaraswamy (Ratan Devi) with Roshanara

Coomaraswamy then met and married a British woman Alice Ethel Richardson and together they went to India and stayed on a houseboat in Srinagar in Kashmir. Commaraswamy studied Rajput painting while his wife studied Indian music with Abdul Rahim of Kapurthala. When they returned to England, Alice performed Indian song under the stage name Ratan Devi. Alice was successful and both went to America when Ratan Devi did a concert tour.[14] While they were there, Coomaraswamy was invited to serve as the first Keeper of Indian art in the Boston Museum of Fine Arts in 1917.[15] The couple had two children, a son, Narada, and daughter, Rohini.

 
Portrait of Ananda Coomaraswamy, published 1907

Coomaraswamy divorced his second wife after they arrived in America.[15] He married the American artist Stella Bloch, 20 years his junior, in November 1922. Through the 1920s, Coomaraswamy and his wife were part of the bohemian art circles in New York City, Coomaraswamy befriended Alfred Stieglitz and the artists who exhibited at Stieglitz's gallery. At the same time, he studied Sanskrit and Pali religious literature as well as Western religious works. He wrote catalogues for the Museum of Fine Arts and published his History of Indian and Indonesian Art in 1927.

After the couple divorced in 1930, they remained friends. Shortly thereafter, on 18 November 1930, Coomaraswamy married Argentine Luisa Runstein, 28 years younger, who was working as a society photographer under the professional name Xlata Llamas. They had a son, Coomaraswamy's third child, Rama Ponnambalam (1929-2006), who became a physician and convert at age 22 to the Roman Catholic Church. Following Vatican II, Rama became a critic of the reforms and author of Catholic Traditionalist works.[16] He was also ordained a Traditionalist Roman Catholic priest, despite the fact that he was married and had a living wife.[17] Rama Coomaraswamy studied in England and then in India, learning Hindi and Sanskrit.[18] Became a psychiatrist in the United States, he was an opponent of Pope John Paul II[18] and remain a wider correspondent of mother Teresa of Calcutta, whose first healing attribution was recognized by John Paul II in 2002.[19]

In 1933 Coomaraswamy's title at the Museum of Fine Arts changed from curator to Fellow for Research in Indian, Persian, and Mohammedan Art.[11] He served as curator in the Museum of Fine Arts until his death in Needham, Massachusetts, in 1947. During his long career, he was instrumental in bringing Eastern art to the West. In fact, while at the Museum of Fine Arts, he built the first substantial collection of Indian art in the United States.[20] He also helped with[clarification needed] the collections of Persian Art at the Freer Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., and the Museum of Fine Arts.

After Coomaraswamy's death, his widow, Doña Luisa Runstein, acted as a guide and resource for students of his work.

Contributions Edit

Coomaraswamy made important contributions to the philosophy of art, literature, and religion. In Ceylon, he applied the lessons of William Morris to Ceylonese culture[citation needed] and, with his wife Ethel, produced a groundbreaking study of Ceylonese crafts and culture. While in India, he was part of the literary circle around Rabindranath Tagore, and he contributed to the "Swadeshi" movement, an early phase of the struggle for Indian independence.[1] In the 1920s, he made discoveries in the history of Indian art, particularly some distinctions between Rajput and Moghul painting, and published his book Rajput Painting. At the same time he amassed an unmatched collection of Rajput and Moghul paintings, which he took with him to the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, when he joined its curatorial staff in 1917. Through 1932, from his base in Boston, he produced two kinds of publications: brilliant scholarship in his curatorial field but also graceful introductions to Indian and Asian art and culture, typified by The Dance of Shiva, a collection of essays that remain in print to this day. Deeply influenced by René Guénon, he became one of the founders of the Traditionalist School. His books and essays on art and culture, symbolism and metaphysics, scripture, folklore and myth, and still other topics, offer a remarkable education to readers who accept the challenges of his resolutely cross-cultural perspective and insistence on tying every point he makes back to sources in multiple traditions. He once remarked, "I actually think in both Eastern and Christian terms—Greek, Latin, Sanskrit, Pali, and to some extent Persian and Chinese."[21] Alongside the deep and not infrequently difficult writings of this period, he also delighted in polemical writings created for a larger audience—essays such as "Why exhibit works of art?" (1943).[22]

In his book The Information Society: An Introduction (Sage, 2003, p. 44), Armand Mattelart credits Coomaraswamy for coining the term 'post-industrial' in 1913.

Methodology Edit

Coomaraswamy was a firm believer in the comparative method. The analysis of both texts and symbols across a wide variety of cultures and time periods allowed him to see below the surface of local interpretations and religious exclusivism to locate the bedrock of tradition. By tradition, he meant that which has been handed down from time beyond memory.

The folk has thus preserved, without understanding, the remains of old traditions that go back sometimes to the indeterminably distant past, to which we can only refer as “prehistoric”.[23] Had the folk beliefs not indeed been once understood, we could not now speak of them as metaphysically intelligible, or explain the accuracy of their formulations.[24]

His extensive knowledge of ancient languages allowed him access to primary sources and his understanding of metaphysics helped him discern the deeper meanings that other scholars often missed. Given the specialization and compartmentation of knowledge that was part of the Western academic tradition, his efforts were not always appreciated. He expressed some of his feelings in a letter to Graham Carey:

What the secular mind does is to assert that we (symbolists) are reading meaning into things that originally had none: our assertion is that they are reading out the meaning. The proof of our contention lies in the perfection, consistency and universality of the pattern in which these meanings are united.[25]

His criticism of the academic world was centered around a number of related issues. First, the academic method, by itself, was ill-equipped to deal with the way in which ideas where transmitted in non-literate cultures, due to an over-reliance on written documentation. Too much was left out.

By “folklore” we mean the whole and consistent body of culture which has been handed down, not in books but by word of mouth and in practice, from time beyond the reach of historical research, in the form of legends, fairy tales, ballads, games, toys, crafts, medicine, agriculture, and other rites, and forms of social organization, especially those that we call “tribal.” This is a cultural complex independent of national and even racial boundaries, and of remarkable similarity throughout the world.[26]

A second point of conflict was the obsessive tendency of Western scholarship to divide cultures, religions, and time periods into discrete categories in order to fit into academic organizational and mental structures.

It is equally surprising that so many scholars, meeting with some universal doctrine in a given context, so often think of it as a local peculiarity.[27]

As a traditionalist, Coomaraswamy emphasized the continuity of culture. He was well aware of historical change but he felt that the connecting elements had been lost by the extreme emphasis placed on change and “progress”. Conflict between a new religion and an older one often obscured the commonalities that linked them.

The opposition of religion to folklore is often a kind of rivalry set up as between a new dispensation and an older tradition, the gods of the older cult becoming the evil spirits of the newer.[28]

He pointed out that the Greek word daimon, which at root indicates something given, was synonymous with the Christian Holy Spirit, God's gift of life. If Christian propagandists chose to emphasize the demonic at the expense of the daimon it was only to further their own cause. Ideas like this did not go over well with other scholars and his correspondence has its share of angry or condescending responses to his work which he deflected with a combination of erudition, tact, and humor.[29]

A third issue that raised his ire was the racism inherent in the Western world's criticism and misinterpretation of traditional and tribal cultures, attitudes tied closely to literacy and the attendant idea of progress.

It was possible for Aristotle, starting from the premise that a man, being actually cultured, may also become literate, to ask whether there is a necessary or merely an accidental connection of literacy with culture. Such a question can hardly arise for those to whom illiteracy implies, as a matter of course, ignorance, backwardness, unfitness for self-government: for you, unlettered people are uncivilized peoples and vice versa—as a recent publisher's blurb expresses it: “The greatest force in civilization is the collective wisdom of a literate people."[30]

Like Franz Boas and a handful of others, Coomaraswamy waged a constant war against racism with the press and academic world. He was a strong advocate for Indian independence and was pressured to leave England for publicly suggesting that Indians not fight in the First World War.[31]

Unlike Rene Guenon and others who shared many of his understandings, he was not content to describe traditional ideas from the inside out, in metaphysical terms alone. His commitment to the Western intellectual tradition was deep. He didn't believe that science and metaphysics were in opposition but were two different ways of looking at the world.[32] He was trained as a geologist and was well equipped to deal with science as well as metaphysics.

Nor did his work suffer from the oversimplifications and distortions that can afflict comparative studies. He was critical of the writings of Carl Jung and of Theosophy which he believed distorted the meaning of traditional ideas.[33] The details he provided in support of his arguments could daunt the ablest scholar; his footnotes sometimes took up more room on a page than the text. The comparative method has achieved a good deal of success in linguistics but its application to culture had rarely gone beyond mere documentation before Ananda Coomaraswamy.

Traditional symbolism Edit

One of Coomaraswamy's most important contributions was his profound understanding of how people communicated in early times and how their ideas were transmitted and preserved in the absence of writing. He felt that traditional symbolism could best be understood by means of images, which preceded writing and which contained ideas that had been handed down from the earliest times and preserved in a vast array of media.

To have lost the art of thinking in images is precisely to have lost the proper linguistic of metaphysics and to have descended to the verbal logic of “philosophy.[34]

His study of traditional symbols had taught him that symbols were meant to express ideas and not emotions and that a study of “styles” and “influences” would reveal little of significance.

An adequate knowledge of theology and cosmology is then indispensable to an understanding of the history of art, insofar as the actual shapes and structures of works of art are determined by their real content. Christian art, for example, begins with the representation of deity by abstract symbols, which may be geometrical, vegetable, or theriomorphic, and are devoid of any sentimental appeal whatever. An anthropomorphic symbol follows, but this is still a form and not a figuration; not made as though to function biologically or as if to illustrate a text book of anatomy or dramatic expression. Still later, the form is sentimentalised; the features of the crucified are made to exhibit human suffering, the type is completely humanised, and where we began with the shape of humanity as an analogical representation of the idea of God, we end with the portrait of the artist's mistress posing as the Madonna and a representation of an all-too-human baby; the Christ is no longer a man-God, but the sort of man we can approve of.[35]

In keeping with his traditionalist stance, he saw this process as one of gradual decay in which the human life world began to encroach gradually on the divine with an attendant growth of sentimentality and loss of meaning. He was fond of quoting the curator, John Lodge: “From the Stone Age until now, quelle dégringolade.”[36]

Coomaraswamy spent a lot of his time documenting themes and images that appeared to be very old, given their widespread distribution. Major areas of study included:

  • Solar symbolism
  • Symbolism of the wheel
  • The Flood story
  • The “Water Cosmology” and the “Plant Style”
  • Soma and the Water of Life
  • Traditional cosmologies (the three worlds)
  • The symbolism of snakes and reptiles
  • The symbolism of birds and other “psychopomps” (soul carriers)
  • The heavenly ladder
  • The cosmic dome and the hole in the sky with its guardian figure
  • The Thread-spirit (sutratman) doctrine that underlies the symbolism of the fiber arts
  • The concept of ether and the symbolism of fire
  • Divine bi-unity (male/female) as one
  • The inverted tree and arboreal symbolism
  • The Symplegades (Clashing Rocks) and the Coincidence of Opposites

He found these symbols in many cultures and time periods, both in religious writings and in folklore. He saw little opposition between religion and folklore. Folklore was transmitted in the vernacular as compared to the sacred languages in which scripture was delivered and interpreted. Folklore was less moralistic but its themes shared a common source with those of religion; Jack's beanstalk was Jacob's ladder. Religion was not “contaminated” by folklore but used it to express the same ideas in a more rationalized and moralized setting, just as Plato used myths to explain his philosophy.

The designs we found in Neolithic times were derived from older images. Thus the continuity of tradition reveals itself best in art, which expresses ideas. Even when religious philosophies developed with writing, a continuity of meaning could be observed often because the change was gradual and the old and the new existed side by side.

In the Vedas, the belief {that all life began in the “Waters”} appears in the form of an old popular theory, for which are substituted the successively more philosophical concepts of Space Cosmology, of a belief in the origin of the world in Non-being, in an origin of the world from Being, and finally in the conception of Brahman (the Absolute) as world-ground. The Water Cosmology, it is true, persists side by side with, and linked with these deeper views, even in post-Vedic literature; but it is typically not a creation of the Vedas and seems to belong to an even older stratum of ideas than that which is developed in the Vedas.[37]

The ideas expressed by images were made explicit by writing, which allowed for a greater degree of abstraction and elaboration but since the concrete preceded the abstract, all philosophy started with images. In the absence of writing, the tribal cultures of the world have preserved a good deal of this older symbolism.

Coomaraswamy also maintained that traditional technologies (like the needle or the fire drill) were applications of metaphysical ideas, just as modern technology is an expression of scientific principles.

Primitive man knew nothing of a possible divorce of function and meaning: all his inventions were applied meaning.[38]

The American art historian, Carl Schuster, who corresponded with Coomarawamy and learned much from him, would go on to identify some of the Paleolithic sources of this symbolism.[39]

Perennial philosophy Edit

 
Portrait of Coomaraswamy printed in the April 1916 issue of The Hindusthanee Student

He was described by Heinrich Zimmer as "That noble scholar upon whose shoulders we are still standing."[40] While serving as a curator to the Boston Museum of Fine Arts in the latter part of his life, he devoted his work to the explication of traditional metaphysics and symbolism. His writings of this period are filled with references to Plato, Plotinus, Clement, Philo, Augustine, Aquinas, Shankara, Eckhart, Rumi and other mystics. When asked how he defined himself foremost, Coomaraswamy said he was a "metaphysician", referring to the concept of perennial philosophy, or sophia perennis.

Along with René Guénon and Frithjof Schuon, Coomaraswamy is regarded as one of the three founders of Perennialism, also called the Traditionalist School. Several articles by Coomaraswamy on the subject of Hinduism and the perennial philosophy were published posthumously in the quarterly journal Studies in Comparative Religion alongside articles by Schuon and Guénon among others.

Although he agrees with Guénon on the universal principles, Coomaraswamy's works are very different in form. By vocation, he was a scholar who dedicated the last decades of his life to "searching the Scriptures".[clarification needed] He offers a perspective on the tradition that complements Guénon's.[clarification needed] He was extremely perceptive regarding aesthetics and wrote dozens of articles on traditional arts and mythology. His works are also finely balanced intellectually. Although born in the Hindu tradition, he had a deep knowledge of the Western tradition as well as a great expertise in, and love for, Greek metaphysics, especially that of Plotinus, the founder of Neoplatonism.

Coomaraswamy built a bridge between East and West that was designed to be two-way: among other things, his metaphysical writings aimed at demonstrating the unity of the Vedanta and Platonism. His works also sought to rehabilitate original Buddhism, as he believed that the distance (i.e. differences) between Buddhism and Hinduism was artificially created by Western Indologists. In his book, Hinduism and Buddhism, he wrote:

The more superficially one studies Buddhism, the more it seems to differ from the Brahmanism in which it originated; the more profound our study, the more difficult it becomes to distinguish Buddhism from Brahmanism, or to say in what respects, if any, Buddhism is really unorthodox.[41]

Works Edit

For a complete bibliography, see James S. Crouch, A Bibliography of Ananda Kentish Coomarswamy. Indira Gandhi, National Center for the Arts, Manohar, New Delhi, (2002). See also Corrigenda to A Bibliography of Ananda Kentish Coomaraswamy.

Traditional art
  • Elements of Buddhist Iconography, Harvard University Press, 1935.
  • Figures of Speech or Figures of Thought?: The Traditional View of Art, (World Wisdom 2007)
  • Introduction To Indian Art, (Kessinger Publishing, 2007)
  • Buddhist Art, (Kessinger Publishing, 2005)
  • Guardians of the Sundoor: Late Iconographic Essays, (Fons Vitae, 2004)
  • History of Indian and Indonesian Art, (Kessinger Publishing, 2003)
  • Teaching of Drawing in Ceylon (1906, Colombo Apothecaries)
  • The Indian craftsman (1909, Probsthain: London)
  • Voluspa; The Sibyl's Saying (1909, Essex House Press, London)
  • Viśvakarmā; examples of Indian architecture, sculpture, painting, handicraft (1914, London)
  • Vidyāpati: Bangīya padābali; songs of the love of Rādhā and Krishna], (1915, The Old Bourne press: London)
  • The mirror of gesture: being the Abhinaya darpaṇa of Nandikeśvara (with Duggirāla Gōpālakr̥ṣṇa) (1917, Harvard University Press; 1997, South Asia Books,)
  • Indian music (1917, G. Schirmer; 2006, Kessinger Publishing,
  • A catalog of sculptures by John Mowbray-Clarke: shown at the Kevorkian Galleries, New York, from May the seventh to June the seventh, 1919. (1919, New York: Kevorkian Galleries, co-authored with Mowbray-Clarke, John, H. Kevorkian, and Amy Murray)
  • Rajput Painting, (B.R. Publishing Corp., 2003)
  • Early Indian Architecture: Cities and City-Gates, (South Asia Books, 2002) I
  • The Origin of the Buddha Image, (Munshirm Manoharlal Pub Pvt Ltd, 2001)
  • The Transformation of Nature in Art, (Sterling Pub Private Ltd, 1996)
  • Bronzes from Ceylon, chiefly in the Colombo Museum, (Dept. of Govt. Print, 1978)
  • Early Indian Architecture: Palaces, (Munshiram Manoharlal, 1975)
  • The arts & crafts of India & Ceylon, (Farrar, Straus, 1964)
  • Christian and Oriental Philosophy of Art, (Dover Publications, 1956)
  • Archaic Indian Terracottas, (Klinkhardt & Biermann, 1928)
  • Yaksas, (Munshirm Manoharlal Pub Pvt Ltd, 1998) ISBN 978-81-215-0230-6
Metaphysics
  • Hinduism and Buddhism, (Kessinger Publishing, 2007; Golden Elixir Press, 2011)
  • Myths of the Hindus & Buddhists (with Sister Nivedita) (1914, H. Holt; 2003, Kessinger Publishing)
  • Buddha and the gospel of Buddhism (1916, G. P. Putnam's sons; 2006, Obscure Press,)
  • A New Approach to the Vedas: An Essay in Translation and Exegesis, (South Asia Books, 1994)
  • The Living Thoughts of Gotama the Buddha, (Fons Vitae, 2001)
  • Time and eternity, (Artibus Asiae, 1947)
  • Perception of the Vedas, (Manohar Publishers and Distributors, 2000)
  • Coomaraswamy: Selected Papers, Volume 2, Metaphysics, (Princeton University Press, 1977)
Social criticism
  • Am I My Brothers Keeper, (Ayer Co, 1947)
  • The Dance of Shiva – Fourteen Indian essays Turn Inc., New York; 2003, Kessinger Publishing,
  • The village community and modern progress (12 pages) (Colombo Apothecaries, 1908)
  • Essays in national idealism (Colombo Apothecaries, 1910)
  • Bugbear of Literacy, (Sophia Perennis, 1979)
  • What is Civilisation?: and Other Essays. Golgonooza Press, (UK),
  • Spiritual Authority and Temporal Power in the Indian Theory of Government, (Oxford University Press, 1994)
Posthumous collections
  • The Door in the Sky. Coomaraswamy on Myth and Meaning, (Princeton University Press, 1997)
  • Coomaraswamy: Selected Papers, 3 volumes: Traditional Art and Symbolism, Metaphysics, His Life and Work, (Princeton University Press, 1977)
  • The Essential Ananda K. Coomaraswamy, (2003, World Wisdom)
  • Guardians of the Sun-Door, (Fons Vitae, 2004)

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c Antliff, Allan (2001). Anarchist Modernism : Art, Politics, and the First American Avant-Garde. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. p. 129. ISBN 9780226021041.
  2. ^ . Archived from the original on 20 April 2008. Retrieved 8 November 2020.
  3. ^ "René Guénon: Life and Work".
  4. ^ Murray Fowler, "In Memoriam: Ananda Kentish Coomaraswamy", Artibus Asiae, Vol. 10, No. 3 (1947), pp. 241-244
  5. ^ . Archived from the original 15 June 2010 at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ "The Annual Ananda Coomaraswamy Memorial Oration 1999". Retrieved 7 April 2016.
  7. ^ Kathleen Taylor, Sir John Woodroffe Tantra and Bengal, Routledge (2012), p. 63
  8. ^ Journal of Comparative Literature & Aesthetics, Volume 16 (1993), p. 61
  9. ^ "Seeing the glory of localism that transcends the narrow boundaries of localism". Silumina. Retrieved 7 June 2021.
  10. ^ Philip Rawson, "A Professional Sage", The New York Review of Books, v. 26, no. 2 (February 22, 1979)
  11. ^ a b "Stella Bloch Papers Relating to Ananda K. Coomaraswamy, 1890-1985 (bulk 1917-1930)". Princeton University Library Manuscripts Division.
  12. ^ Arrowsmith, Rupert Richard. Modernism and the Museum: Asian, African and Pacific Art and the London Avant Garde. Oxford University Press, 2011, passim. ISBN 978-0-19-959369-9.
  13. ^ Video of a Lecture discussing Coomaraswamy's role in the introduction of Indian art to Western Modernists, School of Advanced Study, March 2012.
  14. ^ Alice Richardson, Making Britain, Open University, Retrieved 17 October 2015
  15. ^ a b G. R. Seaman, Coomaraswamy, Ananda Kentish (1877–1947), Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004, accessed 17 Oct 2015
  16. ^ "Rama P.Coomaraswamy (1929-2006)" by William Stoddart and Mateus Soares de Azevedo (3 pdfs)
  17. ^ "On the Validity of My Ordination" by Dr. Rama P. Coomaraswamy
  18. ^ a b Father Rama Coomaraswamy (1981). ""About"". The Destruction of the Christian Tradition. from the original on 9 February 2010. His son, born in Massachusetts in 1932, plays the same role in the catholic resistance guerilla against so-called 'II Vatican Council' and so-called 'John Paul II'. He studied in England and later in India, {{cite book}}: |website= ignored (help)
  19. ^ "Profile: 'Living Saint' Mother Teresa". BBC.com. 18 December 2015. from the original on 1 November 2005. In 2002, five years after her death, Pope John Paul II judged that the healing of a woman suffering from an abdominal tumour was the result of Mother Teresa's supernatural intervention.
  20. ^ Princeton University Press, The Door in the Sky: Coomaraswamy on Myth and Meaning
  21. ^ . Archived from the original on 20 April 2008. Retrieved 21 November 2007.
  22. ^ Why Exhibit Works of Art? 28 August 2010 at the Wayback Machine, essay. He also published a book of that title.
  23. ^ Ananda Coomaraswamy, Christian and Oriental Philosophy of Art, p. 139; quoting René Guénon
  24. ^ Ananda Coomaraswamy, Christian and Oriental Philosophy of Art, p. 140.
  25. ^ Selected Letters of Ananda Coomaraswamy, p. 213. Graham Carey (1892-1984) was an architect, essayist, lecturer and the co-author, with A. K. Coomaraswamy, of Patron and Artist, Pre-Renaissance and Modern (1936).
  26. ^ The Collected Works of Ananda Coomaraswamy, vol. 1, p. 286.
  27. ^ Ananda Coomaraswamy, The Greek Sphinx in Guardians of the Sun-Door pg. 120 ft. 5
  28. ^ The Collected Works of Ananda Coomaraswamy, vol. 1, p. 286, ft.2.
  29. ^ See Selected Letters of Ananda Coomaraswamy, passim, for many examples.
  30. ^ Ananda Coomaraswamy, The Bugbear of Literacy, p. 23, quoting Aristotle, Metaphysics, VI 2, 4, and XI: 8, 12.
  31. ^ See Selected Letters of Ananda Coomaraswamy, passim, for his stance on Indian independence.
  32. ^ See Ananda Coomaraswamy, What is Civilisation and Other Essays. “Gradation and Evolution” Chapters 7 and 8.
  33. ^ See "Vedanta and Western Tradition" in The Collected Works of Ananda Coomaraswamy, vol. 2, and The Selected Letters of Ananda Coomaraswamy, p. 150 and p. 157.
  34. ^ The Collected Works of Ananda Coomaraswamy, vol. 1, pp. 296-297.
  35. ^ Ananda Coomaraswamy, Christian and Oriental Philosophy of Art, pl. 45.
  36. ^ "From the Stone Age until now, what a downfall.
  37. ^ "Ananda Coomaraswamy, Yaksas, pp. 98-99.
  38. ^ Selected Letters of Ananda Coomaraswamy, p. 291, in a letter to George Sarton.
  39. ^ See Selected Letters of Ananda Coomaraswamy, pp. 220-221, for one example. The two men met in Cambridge, Massachusetts in the 1930s.
  40. ^ Multiworld.org/m_versity/althinkers... - StumbleUpon
  41. ^ Coomaraswamy, Ananda (1943). Hinduism and Buddhism. Open Road Media. ISBN 1497675847.

Sources Edit

  • "Ananda Kentish Coomaraswamy" in One Hundred Tamils of the 20th Century
  • "Coomaraswamy, Ananda K.", Encyclopaedia of Indian Literature, vol. 1, ed. Amaresh Dutta, Sahitya Akademi (1987), p. 768. ISBN 81-260-1803-8
  • Mattelart, Armand. The Information Society: An Introduction, Sage: London, Thousand Oaks, New Delhi, 2003, p. 44.

Further reading Edit

  • Ananda Coomaraswamy: remembering and remembering again and again, by S. Durai Raja Singam. Publisher: Raja Singam, 1974.
  • Ananda K. Coomaraswamy, by P. S. Sastri. Arnold-Heinemann Publishers, India, 1974.
  • Ananda Kentish Coomaraswamy: a handbook, by S. Durai Raja Singam. Publisher s.n., 1979.
  • Ananda Coomaraswamy: a study, by Moni Bagchee. Publisher: Bharata Manisha, 1977.
  • Ananda K. Coomaraswamy, by Vishwanath S. Naravane. Twayne Publishers, 1977. ISBN 0-8057-7722-9.
  • Selected letters of Ananda Coomaraswamy, Edited by Alvin Moore, Jr; and Rama P. Coomaraswamy (1988)
  • Coomaraswamy: Volume I: Selected Papers, Traditional Art and Symbolism, Princeton University Press (1977)
  • Coomaraswamy: Volume II: Selected Papers, Metaphysics, Edited by Roger Lipsey, Princeton University Press (1977)
  • Coomaraswamy: Volume III: His Life and Work, by Roger Lipsey, Princeton University Press (1977)

External links Edit

  • Works by Ananda Coomaraswamy at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Ananda Coomaraswamy at Internet Archive
  • 1999 Coomaraswamy lecture by Sandrasagra
  • Ananda K. Coomaraswamy at WorldCat
  • Coomaraswamy bibliography at religioperennis.org
  • Coomaraswamy's Impetus to Eastern Spirit
  • Coomarswamy in Dictionary of Art Historians
  • Ananda Coomaraswamy materials in the South Asian American Digital Archive (SAADA)

ananda, coomaraswamy, ananda, kentish, muthu, coomaraswamy, tamil, ஆனந, ரச, Āṉanta, kentiś, muthū, kumāracuvāmi, sinhala, ආනන, රස, Ānanda, kumārasvāmī, august, 1877, september, 1947, ceylonese, metaphysician, historian, philosopher, indian, early, interpreter,. Ananda Kentish Muthu Coomaraswamy Tamil ஆனந த க ம ரச வ ம Aṉanta Kentis Muthu Kumaracuvami Sinhala ආනන ද ක ම රස ව ම Ananda Kumarasvami 22 August 1877 9 September 1947 was a Ceylonese metaphysician historian and a philosopher of Indian art who was an early interpreter of Indian culture to the West 4 In particular he is described as the groundbreaking theorist who was largely responsible for introducing ancient Indian art to the West 5 Ananda Kentish CoomaraswamyCoomaraswamy in 1916Born 1877 08 22 22 August 1877Colombo British CeylonDied9 September 1947 1947 09 09 aged 70 Needham Massachusetts U S NationalityBritish Ceylonese AmericanNotable workThe Dance of Shiva 1918 Hinduism and Buddhism 1943 SpousesEthel Mairet m 1902 1913 Ratna Devi m 1913 1922 Stella Bloch m 1922 1930 Luisa Runstein m 1930 1947 his death EraModern philosophy20th century philosophyRegionIndian philosophyWestern philosophySchoolPerennialismTraditionalist SchoolMain interestsmetaphysics philosophy of art history Contents 1 Life 2 Contributions 3 Methodology 4 Traditional symbolism 5 Perennial philosophy 6 Works 7 See also 8 References 9 Sources 10 Further reading 11 External linksLife EditSee also Ponnambalam Coomaraswamy family Ananda Kentish Coomaraswamy was born in Colombo British Ceylon now Sri Lanka to the Ceylon Tamil legislator and philosopher Sir Muthu Coomaraswamy of the Ponnambalam Coomaraswamy family and his English wife Elizabeth Beeby 6 7 8 His father died when Ananda was two years old and Ananda spent much of his childhood and education abroad 9 Coomaraswamy moved to England in 1879 and attended Wycliffe College a preparatory school in Stroud Gloucestershire at the age of twelve In 1900 he graduated from University College London UCL with a degree in geology and botany On 19 June 1902 Coomaraswamy married Ethel Mary Partridge an English photographer who then traveled with him to Ceylon Their marriage lasted until 1913 Coomaraswamy s field work between 1902 and 1906 earned him a doctor of science for his study of Ceylonese mineralogy and prompted the formation of the Geological Survey of Ceylon which he initially directed 10 While in Ceylon the couple collaborated on Mediaeval Sinhalese Art Coomaraswamy wrote the text and Ethel provided the photographs His work in Ceylon fueled Coomaraswamy s anti Westernization sentiments 11 After their divorce Partridge returned to England where she became a famous weaver and later married the writer Philip Mairet By 1906 Coomaraswamy had made it his mission to educate the West about Indian art and was back in London with a large collection of photographs actively seeking out artists to try to influence He knew he could not rely on museum curators or other members of the cultural establishment in 1908 he wrote The main difficulty so far seems to have been that Indian art has been studied so far only by archaeologists It is not archaeologists but artists who are the best qualified to judge of the significance of works of art considered as art By 1909 he was firmly acquainted with Jacob Epstein and Eric Gill the city s two most important early Modernists and soon both of them had begun to incorporate Indian aesthetics into their work The curiously hybrid sculptures that were produced as a result can be seen to form the very roots of what is now considered British Modernism 12 13 nbsp His second wife Alice Coomaraswamy Ratan Devi with RoshanaraCoomaraswamy then met and married a British woman Alice Ethel Richardson and together they went to India and stayed on a houseboat in Srinagar in Kashmir Commaraswamy studied Rajput painting while his wife studied Indian music with Abdul Rahim of Kapurthala When they returned to England Alice performed Indian song under the stage name Ratan Devi Alice was successful and both went to America when Ratan Devi did a concert tour 14 While they were there Coomaraswamy was invited to serve as the first Keeper of Indian art in the Boston Museum of Fine Arts in 1917 15 The couple had two children a son Narada and daughter Rohini nbsp Portrait of Ananda Coomaraswamy published 1907Coomaraswamy divorced his second wife after they arrived in America 15 He married the American artist Stella Bloch 20 years his junior in November 1922 Through the 1920s Coomaraswamy and his wife were part of the bohemian art circles in New York City Coomaraswamy befriended Alfred Stieglitz and the artists who exhibited at Stieglitz s gallery At the same time he studied Sanskrit and Pali religious literature as well as Western religious works He wrote catalogues for the Museum of Fine Arts and published his History of Indian and Indonesian Art in 1927 After the couple divorced in 1930 they remained friends Shortly thereafter on 18 November 1930 Coomaraswamy married Argentine Luisa Runstein 28 years younger who was working as a society photographer under the professional name Xlata Llamas They had a son Coomaraswamy s third child Rama Ponnambalam 1929 2006 who became a physician and convert at age 22 to the Roman Catholic Church Following Vatican II Rama became a critic of the reforms and author of Catholic Traditionalist works 16 He was also ordained a Traditionalist Roman Catholic priest despite the fact that he was married and had a living wife 17 Rama Coomaraswamy studied in England and then in India learning Hindi and Sanskrit 18 Became a psychiatrist in the United States he was an opponent of Pope John Paul II 18 and remain a wider correspondent of mother Teresa of Calcutta whose first healing attribution was recognized by John Paul II in 2002 19 In 1933 Coomaraswamy s title at the Museum of Fine Arts changed from curator to Fellow for Research in Indian Persian and Mohammedan Art 11 He served as curator in the Museum of Fine Arts until his death in Needham Massachusetts in 1947 During his long career he was instrumental in bringing Eastern art to the West In fact while at the Museum of Fine Arts he built the first substantial collection of Indian art in the United States 20 He also helped with clarification needed the collections of Persian Art at the Freer Gallery of Art in Washington D C and the Museum of Fine Arts After Coomaraswamy s death his widow Dona Luisa Runstein acted as a guide and resource for students of his work Contributions EditCoomaraswamy made important contributions to the philosophy of art literature and religion In Ceylon he applied the lessons of William Morris to Ceylonese culture citation needed and with his wife Ethel produced a groundbreaking study of Ceylonese crafts and culture While in India he was part of the literary circle around Rabindranath Tagore and he contributed to the Swadeshi movement an early phase of the struggle for Indian independence 1 In the 1920s he made discoveries in the history of Indian art particularly some distinctions between Rajput and Moghul painting and published his book Rajput Painting At the same time he amassed an unmatched collection of Rajput and Moghul paintings which he took with him to the Museum of Fine Arts Boston when he joined its curatorial staff in 1917 Through 1932 from his base in Boston he produced two kinds of publications brilliant scholarship in his curatorial field but also graceful introductions to Indian and Asian art and culture typified by The Dance of Shiva a collection of essays that remain in print to this day Deeply influenced by Rene Guenon he became one of the founders of the Traditionalist School His books and essays on art and culture symbolism and metaphysics scripture folklore and myth and still other topics offer a remarkable education to readers who accept the challenges of his resolutely cross cultural perspective and insistence on tying every point he makes back to sources in multiple traditions He once remarked I actually think in both Eastern and Christian terms Greek Latin Sanskrit Pali and to some extent Persian and Chinese 21 Alongside the deep and not infrequently difficult writings of this period he also delighted in polemical writings created for a larger audience essays such as Why exhibit works of art 1943 22 In his book The Information Society An Introduction Sage 2003 p 44 Armand Mattelart credits Coomaraswamy for coining the term post industrial in 1913 Methodology EditCoomaraswamy was a firm believer in the comparative method The analysis of both texts and symbols across a wide variety of cultures and time periods allowed him to see below the surface of local interpretations and religious exclusivism to locate the bedrock of tradition By tradition he meant that which has been handed down from time beyond memory The folk has thus preserved without understanding the remains of old traditions that go back sometimes to the indeterminably distant past to which we can only refer as prehistoric 23 Had the folk beliefs not indeed been once understood we could not now speak of them as metaphysically intelligible or explain the accuracy of their formulations 24 His extensive knowledge of ancient languages allowed him access to primary sources and his understanding of metaphysics helped him discern the deeper meanings that other scholars often missed Given the specialization and compartmentation of knowledge that was part of the Western academic tradition his efforts were not always appreciated He expressed some of his feelings in a letter to Graham Carey What the secular mind does is to assert that we symbolists are reading meaning into things that originally had none our assertion is that they are reading out the meaning The proof of our contention lies in the perfection consistency and universality of the pattern in which these meanings are united 25 His criticism of the academic world was centered around a number of related issues First the academic method by itself was ill equipped to deal with the way in which ideas where transmitted in non literate cultures due to an over reliance on written documentation Too much was left out By folklore we mean the whole and consistent body of culture which has been handed down not in books but by word of mouth and in practice from time beyond the reach of historical research in the form of legends fairy tales ballads games toys crafts medicine agriculture and other rites and forms of social organization especially those that we call tribal This is a cultural complex independent of national and even racial boundaries and of remarkable similarity throughout the world 26 A second point of conflict was the obsessive tendency of Western scholarship to divide cultures religions and time periods into discrete categories in order to fit into academic organizational and mental structures It is equally surprising that so many scholars meeting with some universal doctrine in a given context so often think of it as a local peculiarity 27 As a traditionalist Coomaraswamy emphasized the continuity of culture He was well aware of historical change but he felt that the connecting elements had been lost by the extreme emphasis placed on change and progress Conflict between a new religion and an older one often obscured the commonalities that linked them The opposition of religion to folklore is often a kind of rivalry set up as between a new dispensation and an older tradition the gods of the older cult becoming the evil spirits of the newer 28 He pointed out that the Greek word daimon which at root indicates something given was synonymous with the Christian Holy Spirit God s gift of life If Christian propagandists chose to emphasize the demonic at the expense of the daimon it was only to further their own cause Ideas like this did not go over well with other scholars and his correspondence has its share of angry or condescending responses to his work which he deflected with a combination of erudition tact and humor 29 A third issue that raised his ire was the racism inherent in the Western world s criticism and misinterpretation of traditional and tribal cultures attitudes tied closely to literacy and the attendant idea of progress It was possible for Aristotle starting from the premise that a man being actually cultured may also become literate to ask whether there is a necessary or merely an accidental connection of literacy with culture Such a question can hardly arise for those to whom illiteracy implies as a matter of course ignorance backwardness unfitness for self government for you unlettered people are uncivilized peoples and vice versa as a recent publisher s blurb expresses it The greatest force in civilization is the collective wisdom of a literate people 30 Like Franz Boas and a handful of others Coomaraswamy waged a constant war against racism with the press and academic world He was a strong advocate for Indian independence and was pressured to leave England for publicly suggesting that Indians not fight in the First World War 31 Unlike Rene Guenon and others who shared many of his understandings he was not content to describe traditional ideas from the inside out in metaphysical terms alone His commitment to the Western intellectual tradition was deep He didn t believe that science and metaphysics were in opposition but were two different ways of looking at the world 32 He was trained as a geologist and was well equipped to deal with science as well as metaphysics Nor did his work suffer from the oversimplifications and distortions that can afflict comparative studies He was critical of the writings of Carl Jung and of Theosophy which he believed distorted the meaning of traditional ideas 33 The details he provided in support of his arguments could daunt the ablest scholar his footnotes sometimes took up more room on a page than the text The comparative method has achieved a good deal of success in linguistics but its application to culture had rarely gone beyond mere documentation before Ananda Coomaraswamy Traditional symbolism EditOne of Coomaraswamy s most important contributions was his profound understanding of how people communicated in early times and how their ideas were transmitted and preserved in the absence of writing He felt that traditional symbolism could best be understood by means of images which preceded writing and which contained ideas that had been handed down from the earliest times and preserved in a vast array of media To have lost the art of thinking in images is precisely to have lost the proper linguistic of metaphysics and to have descended to the verbal logic of philosophy 34 His study of traditional symbols had taught him that symbols were meant to express ideas and not emotions and that a study of styles and influences would reveal little of significance An adequate knowledge of theology and cosmology is then indispensable to an understanding of the history of art insofar as the actual shapes and structures of works of art are determined by their real content Christian art for example begins with the representation of deity by abstract symbols which may be geometrical vegetable or theriomorphic and are devoid of any sentimental appeal whatever An anthropomorphic symbol follows but this is still a form and not a figuration not made as though to function biologically or as if to illustrate a text book of anatomy or dramatic expression Still later the form is sentimentalised the features of the crucified are made to exhibit human suffering the type is completely humanised and where we began with the shape of humanity as an analogical representation of the idea of God we end with the portrait of the artist s mistress posing as the Madonna and a representation of an all too human baby the Christ is no longer a man God but the sort of man we can approve of 35 In keeping with his traditionalist stance he saw this process as one of gradual decay in which the human life world began to encroach gradually on the divine with an attendant growth of sentimentality and loss of meaning He was fond of quoting the curator John Lodge From the Stone Age until now quelle degringolade 36 Coomaraswamy spent a lot of his time documenting themes and images that appeared to be very old given their widespread distribution Major areas of study included Solar symbolism Symbolism of the wheel The Flood story The Water Cosmology and the Plant Style Soma and the Water of Life Traditional cosmologies the three worlds The symbolism of snakes and reptiles The symbolism of birds and other psychopomps soul carriers The heavenly ladder The cosmic dome and the hole in the sky with its guardian figure The Thread spirit sutratman doctrine that underlies the symbolism of the fiber arts The concept of ether and the symbolism of fire Divine bi unity male female as one The inverted tree and arboreal symbolism The Symplegades Clashing Rocks and the Coincidence of OppositesHe found these symbols in many cultures and time periods both in religious writings and in folklore He saw little opposition between religion and folklore Folklore was transmitted in the vernacular as compared to the sacred languages in which scripture was delivered and interpreted Folklore was less moralistic but its themes shared a common source with those of religion Jack s beanstalk was Jacob s ladder Religion was not contaminated by folklore but used it to express the same ideas in a more rationalized and moralized setting just as Plato used myths to explain his philosophy The designs we found in Neolithic times were derived from older images Thus the continuity of tradition reveals itself best in art which expresses ideas Even when religious philosophies developed with writing a continuity of meaning could be observed often because the change was gradual and the old and the new existed side by side In the Vedas the belief that all life began in the Waters appears in the form of an old popular theory for which are substituted the successively more philosophical concepts of Space Cosmology of a belief in the origin of the world in Non being in an origin of the world from Being and finally in the conception of Brahman the Absolute as world ground The Water Cosmology it is true persists side by side with and linked with these deeper views even in post Vedic literature but it is typically not a creation of the Vedas and seems to belong to an even older stratum of ideas than that which is developed in the Vedas 37 The ideas expressed by images were made explicit by writing which allowed for a greater degree of abstraction and elaboration but since the concrete preceded the abstract all philosophy started with images In the absence of writing the tribal cultures of the world have preserved a good deal of this older symbolism Coomaraswamy also maintained that traditional technologies like the needle or the fire drill were applications of metaphysical ideas just as modern technology is an expression of scientific principles Primitive man knew nothing of a possible divorce of function and meaning all his inventions were applied meaning 38 The American art historian Carl Schuster who corresponded with Coomarawamy and learned much from him would go on to identify some of the Paleolithic sources of this symbolism 39 Perennial philosophy Edit nbsp Portrait of Coomaraswamy printed in the April 1916 issue of The Hindusthanee StudentHe was described by Heinrich Zimmer as That noble scholar upon whose shoulders we are still standing 40 While serving as a curator to the Boston Museum of Fine Arts in the latter part of his life he devoted his work to the explication of traditional metaphysics and symbolism His writings of this period are filled with references to Plato Plotinus Clement Philo Augustine Aquinas Shankara Eckhart Rumi and other mystics When asked how he defined himself foremost Coomaraswamy said he was a metaphysician referring to the concept of perennial philosophy or sophia perennis Along with Rene Guenon and Frithjof Schuon Coomaraswamy is regarded as one of the three founders of Perennialism also called the Traditionalist School Several articles by Coomaraswamy on the subject of Hinduism and the perennial philosophy were published posthumously in the quarterly journal Studies in Comparative Religion alongside articles by Schuon and Guenon among others Although he agrees with Guenon on the universal principles Coomaraswamy s works are very different in form By vocation he was a scholar who dedicated the last decades of his life to searching the Scriptures clarification needed He offers a perspective on the tradition that complements Guenon s clarification needed He was extremely perceptive regarding aesthetics and wrote dozens of articles on traditional arts and mythology His works are also finely balanced intellectually Although born in the Hindu tradition he had a deep knowledge of the Western tradition as well as a great expertise in and love for Greek metaphysics especially that of Plotinus the founder of Neoplatonism Coomaraswamy built a bridge between East and West that was designed to be two way among other things his metaphysical writings aimed at demonstrating the unity of the Vedanta and Platonism His works also sought to rehabilitate original Buddhism as he believed that the distance i e differences between Buddhism and Hinduism was artificially created by Western Indologists In his book Hinduism and Buddhism he wrote The more superficially one studies Buddhism the more it seems to differ from the Brahmanism in which it originated the more profound our study the more difficult it becomes to distinguish Buddhism from Brahmanism or to say in what respects if any Buddhism is really unorthodox 41 Works EditFor a complete bibliography see James S Crouch A Bibliography of Ananda Kentish Coomarswamy Indira Gandhi National Center for the Arts Manohar New Delhi 2002 See also Corrigenda to A Bibliography of Ananda Kentish Coomaraswamy Traditional artElements of Buddhist Iconography Harvard University Press 1935 Figures of Speech or Figures of Thought The Traditional View of Art World Wisdom 2007 Introduction To Indian Art Kessinger Publishing 2007 Buddhist Art Kessinger Publishing 2005 Guardians of the Sundoor Late Iconographic Essays Fons Vitae 2004 History of Indian and Indonesian Art Kessinger Publishing 2003 Teaching of Drawing in Ceylon 1906 Colombo Apothecaries The Indian craftsman 1909 Probsthain London Voluspa The Sibyl s Saying 1909 Essex House Press London Visvakarma examples of Indian architecture sculpture painting handicraft 1914 London Vidyapati Bangiya padabali songs of the love of Radha and Krishna 1915 The Old Bourne press London The mirror of gesture being the Abhinaya darpaṇa of Nandikesvara with Duggirala Gōpalakr ṣṇa 1917 Harvard University Press 1997 South Asia Books Indian music 1917 G Schirmer 2006 Kessinger Publishing A catalog of sculptures by John Mowbray Clarke shown at the Kevorkian Galleries New York from May the seventh to June the seventh 1919 1919 New York Kevorkian Galleries co authored with Mowbray Clarke John H Kevorkian and Amy Murray Rajput Painting B R Publishing Corp 2003 Early Indian Architecture Cities and City Gates South Asia Books 2002 I The Origin of the Buddha Image Munshirm Manoharlal Pub Pvt Ltd 2001 The Transformation of Nature in Art Sterling Pub Private Ltd 1996 Bronzes from Ceylon chiefly in the Colombo Museum Dept of Govt Print 1978 Early Indian Architecture Palaces Munshiram Manoharlal 1975 The arts amp crafts of India amp Ceylon Farrar Straus 1964 Christian and Oriental Philosophy of Art Dover Publications 1956 Archaic Indian Terracottas Klinkhardt amp Biermann 1928 Yaksas Munshirm Manoharlal Pub Pvt Ltd 1998 ISBN 978 81 215 0230 6MetaphysicsHinduism and Buddhism Kessinger Publishing 2007 Golden Elixir Press 2011 Myths of the Hindus amp Buddhists with Sister Nivedita 1914 H Holt 2003 Kessinger Publishing Buddha and the gospel of Buddhism 1916 G P Putnam s sons 2006 Obscure Press A New Approach to the Vedas An Essay in Translation and Exegesis South Asia Books 1994 The Living Thoughts of Gotama the Buddha Fons Vitae 2001 Time and eternity Artibus Asiae 1947 Perception of the Vedas Manohar Publishers and Distributors 2000 Coomaraswamy Selected Papers Volume 2 Metaphysics Princeton University Press 1977 Social criticismAm I My Brothers Keeper Ayer Co 1947 The Dance of Shiva Fourteen Indian essays Turn Inc New York 2003 Kessinger Publishing The village community and modern progress 12 pages Colombo Apothecaries 1908 Essays in national idealism Colombo Apothecaries 1910 Bugbear of Literacy Sophia Perennis 1979 What is Civilisation and Other Essays Golgonooza Press UK Spiritual Authority and Temporal Power in the Indian Theory of Government Oxford University Press 1994 Posthumous collectionsThe Door in the Sky Coomaraswamy on Myth and Meaning Princeton University Press 1997 Coomaraswamy Selected Papers 3 volumes Traditional Art and Symbolism Metaphysics His Life and Work Princeton University Press 1977 The Essential Ananda K Coomaraswamy 2003 World Wisdom Guardians of the Sun Door Fons Vitae 2004 See also EditIvan Agueli Titus Burckhardt Calico Museum of Textiles Comparative Religion Esoterism Rene Guenon Seyyed Hossein Nasr Martin Lings Whitall Perry Huston Smith William Stoddart Mateus Soares de Azevedo Michel Valsan Advaita Vedanta Carl SchusterReferences Edit a b c Antliff Allan 2001 Anarchist Modernism Art Politics and the First American Avant Garde Chicago University of Chicago Press p 129 ISBN 9780226021041 Anand Coomaraswamy A Pen Sketch By Dr Rama P Coomaraswamy Archived from the original on 20 April 2008 Retrieved 8 November 2020 Rene Guenon Life and Work Murray Fowler In Memoriam Ananda Kentish Coomaraswamy Artibus Asiae Vol 10 No 3 1947 pp 241 244 MFA South Asian Art Archived from the original Archived 15 June 2010 at the Wayback Machine The Annual Ananda Coomaraswamy Memorial Oration 1999 Retrieved 7 April 2016 Kathleen Taylor Sir John Woodroffe Tantra and Bengal Routledge 2012 p 63 Journal of Comparative Literature amp Aesthetics Volume 16 1993 p 61 Seeing the glory of localism that transcends the narrow boundaries of localism Silumina Retrieved 7 June 2021 Philip Rawson A Professional Sage The New York Review of Books v 26 no 2 February 22 1979 a b Stella Bloch Papers Relating to Ananda K Coomaraswamy 1890 1985 bulk 1917 1930 Princeton University Library Manuscripts Division Arrowsmith Rupert Richard Modernism and the Museum Asian African and Pacific Art and the London Avant Garde Oxford University Press 2011 passim ISBN 978 0 19 959369 9 Video of a Lecture discussing Coomaraswamy s role in the introduction of Indian art to Western Modernists School of Advanced Study March 2012 Alice Richardson Making Britain Open University Retrieved 17 October 2015 a b G R Seaman Coomaraswamy Ananda Kentish 1877 1947 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press 2004 accessed 17 Oct 2015 Rama P Coomaraswamy 1929 2006 by William Stoddart and Mateus Soares de Azevedo 3 pdfs On the Validity of My Ordination by Dr Rama P Coomaraswamy a b Father Rama Coomaraswamy 1981 About The Destruction of the Christian Tradition Archived from the original on 9 February 2010 His son born in Massachusetts in 1932 plays the same role in the catholic resistance guerilla against so called II Vatican Council and so called John Paul II He studied in England and later in India a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a website ignored help Profile Living Saint Mother Teresa BBC com 18 December 2015 Archived from the original on 1 November 2005 In 2002 five years after her death Pope John Paul II judged that the healing of a woman suffering from an abdominal tumour was the result of Mother Teresa s supernatural intervention Princeton University Press The Door in the Sky Coomaraswamy on Myth and Meaning Anand Coomaraswamy A Pen Sketch By Dr Rama P Coomaraswamy Archived from the original on 20 April 2008 Retrieved 21 November 2007 Why Exhibit Works of Art Archived 28 August 2010 at the Wayback Machine essay He also published a book of that title Ananda Coomaraswamy Christian and Oriental Philosophy of Art p 139 quoting Rene Guenon Ananda Coomaraswamy Christian and Oriental Philosophy of Art p 140 Selected Letters of Ananda Coomaraswamy p 213 Graham Carey 1892 1984 was an architect essayist lecturer and the co author with A K Coomaraswamy of Patron and Artist Pre Renaissance and Modern 1936 The Collected Works of Ananda Coomaraswamy vol 1 p 286 Ananda Coomaraswamy The Greek Sphinx in Guardians of the Sun Door pg 120 ft 5 The Collected Works of Ananda Coomaraswamy vol 1 p 286 ft 2 See Selected Letters of Ananda Coomaraswamy passim for many examples Ananda Coomaraswamy The Bugbear of Literacy p 23 quoting Aristotle Metaphysics VI 2 4 and XI 8 12 See Selected Letters of Ananda Coomaraswamy passim for his stance on Indian independence See Ananda Coomaraswamy What is Civilisation and Other Essays Gradation and Evolution Chapters 7 and 8 See Vedanta and Western Tradition in The Collected Works of Ananda Coomaraswamy vol 2 and The Selected Letters of Ananda Coomaraswamy p 150 and p 157 The Collected Works of Ananda Coomaraswamy vol 1 pp 296 297 Ananda Coomaraswamy Christian and Oriental Philosophy of Art pl 45 From the Stone Age until now what a downfall Ananda Coomaraswamy Yaksas pp 98 99 Selected Letters of Ananda Coomaraswamy p 291 in a letter to George Sarton See Selected Letters of Ananda Coomaraswamy pp 220 221 for one example The two men met in Cambridge Massachusetts in the 1930s Multiworld org m versity althinkers StumbleUpon Coomaraswamy Ananda 1943 Hinduism and Buddhism Open Road Media ISBN 1497675847 Sources EditT Wignesan Ananda K Coomaraswamy s Aesthetics Tamil studies Now published in the collection T Wignesan Rama and Ravana at the Altar of Hanuman On Tamils Tamil Literature amp Tamil Culture Allahabad Cyberwit net 2008 750p amp at Chennai Institute of Asian Studies 2007 439p Ananda Kentish Coomaraswamy in One Hundred Tamils of the 20th Century Coomaraswamy Ananda K Encyclopaedia of Indian Literature vol 1 ed Amaresh Dutta Sahitya Akademi 1987 p 768 ISBN 81 260 1803 8 Mattelart Armand The Information Society An Introduction Sage London Thousand Oaks New Delhi 2003 p 44 Further reading EditAnanda Coomaraswamy remembering and remembering again and again by S Durai Raja Singam Publisher Raja Singam 1974 Ananda K Coomaraswamy by P S Sastri Arnold Heinemann Publishers India 1974 Ananda Kentish Coomaraswamy a handbook by S Durai Raja Singam Publisher s n 1979 Ananda Coomaraswamy a study by Moni Bagchee Publisher Bharata Manisha 1977 Ananda K Coomaraswamy by Vishwanath S Naravane Twayne Publishers 1977 ISBN 0 8057 7722 9 Selected letters of Ananda Coomaraswamy Edited by Alvin Moore Jr and Rama P Coomaraswamy 1988 Coomaraswamy Volume I Selected Papers Traditional Art and Symbolism Princeton University Press 1977 Coomaraswamy Volume II Selected Papers Metaphysics Edited by Roger Lipsey Princeton University Press 1977 Coomaraswamy Volume III His Life and Work by Roger Lipsey Princeton University Press 1977 External links Edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Ananda Coomaraswamy Works by Ananda Coomaraswamy at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Ananda Coomaraswamy at Internet Archive Books by Coomaraswamy Fons Vitae Series 1999 Coomaraswamy lecture by Sandrasagra Ananda K Coomaraswamy at WorldCat Coomaraswamy bibliography at religioperennis org Ananda K Coomaraswamy s Life and Work at World Wisdom publishers The Colonial Context and Aesthetic Identity Formation Coomaraswamy A Case Study by Binda Paranjpe Coomaraswamy s Impetus to Eastern Spirit Coomarswamy in Dictionary of Art Historians Ananda Coomaraswamy materials in the South Asian American Digital Archive SAADA Portals nbsp Hinduism nbsp India nbsp Religion Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ananda Coomaraswamy amp oldid 1176444550, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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