Worshipping the Ideal King: On the Social Implications of Medieval Jaina Conversion Stories

Main author: Flügel, Peter
Format: Book Chapters           
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id eprints-10434
recordtype eprints
institution SOAS, University of London
collection SOAS Research Online
language English
language_search English
description The article argues that not only Jaina poetic fiction, but also the genres of Jain history, even ‘plain’ chronologies, are shaped by the imperatives of religious pragmatics. It demonstrates how through the rhetorical device of ‘communicative self-reference’, where a text points at its own communicative context, a variety of different Jaina narrative genres can function as conversion stories. A standard feature of Jain narratives is that the listener to a religious discourse frquently finds him/herself in a conventional speech situation, a sermon for instance, which mirrors the narrative frame in the text, and thus facilitates identification with the conversion experiences and soteriological trajectories typically highlighted in Jains texts. The article offers a solution for the conundrum of the frequent tropes of violence in Jaina stories by arguing that these are deliberately used to force conversational implicatures on the listener for the purpose of evoking experiences of religious insight, through techniques of defamiliarization, displacement, and the violation of expectations.
author_additional Schalk, Peter
author_additionalStr Schalk, Peter
format Book Chapters
author Flügel, Peter
author_facet Flügel, Peter
authorStr Flügel, Peter
author_letter Flügel, Peter
title Worshipping the Ideal King: On the Social Implications of Medieval Jaina Conversion Stories
publisher Uppsala
publishDate 2010
url https://eprints.soas.ac.uk/10434/