Ayurveda, philology and print. On the first printed edition of the Carakasamhita and its context: On the First Printed Edition of the Carakasaṃhitā and Its Context

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Abstract

The transition from manuscripts to the print production of books involved not only publishers, printers and readers, but importantly also editors of texts. This essay combines insights from the history of Ayurveda, history of philology and history of the book to examine the role of different actors in the transmission of the Ayurvedic textual tradition in nineteenth century South Asia. In particular, it focuses on the first printed edition of the Carakasarphita (the oldest treatise of Ayurveda), its editor Gangadhar Ray Kaviraj (1798-1885), and the publisher Bhuvana Chandra Vasaka. It outlines the very beginnings of the 'print moment' in the history of Sanskritic Ayurveda: the Ayurvedic milieu of nineteenth century Bengal, that region's fast-growing commercial print industry and the context of the first print publication of another foundation& work of Ayurveda, the Suk utasalphita, more than thirty years earlier than the Carakasarnhiter. This essay argues that the use of the printed book, as a technologybased object, was part of a process of modernization and caste-identity formation. It argues further that indigenous philological practices had a crucial role in transmitting Ayurvedic knowledge, and that their interplay with publishing activities contributed to establishing a coherent body of textual sources within the Ayurvedic community and among the students of Sanskritic culture at large.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)112-134
Number of pages23
JournalSouth Asian History and Culture
Volume13
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 4 Apr 2022

Austrian Fields of Science 2012

  • 602018 Indology
  • 305903 History of medicine

Keywords

  • History of Ayurveda
  • Indian print
  • book history
  • colonial Bengal
  • history of philology

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