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  1. Handbook of Logical Thought in India.Sundar Sarukkai & Mihir Chakraborty (eds.) - 2018 - New Delhi, India: Springer.
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  • Abhinavagupta’s Erotic Mysticism: The Reconciliation of Spirit and Flesh. [REVIEW]Kerry Martin Skora - 2007 - International Journal of Hindu Studies 11 (1):63-88.
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  • The Social Aesthetic and Sanskrit Literary Theory.Sheldon Pollock - 2001 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 29 (1/2):197-229.
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  • Sharing a single seat: The poetics and politics of male intimacy in the vikramāṅkakāvya. [REVIEW]Whitney Cox - 2010 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 38 (5):485-501.
    In this essay, I trace the enabling conditions for the major statement of the subversive subtext in Bilhaṇa’s Vikramāṅkadevacarita (VDC) by unpacking the operation of the work’s patent, eulogistic text. In particular, I will explore the place given to the depiction of male intimacy as a poetic substitute or simulacrum for the political alliances central to Vikramāditya’s coming to the throne, as described in the mahākāvya’s fourth through sixth sargas . My intention in focusing on the intense friendships between men (...)
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  • Narrative and the Literary Imagination.John Gibson - 2014 - In Allen Speight (ed.), Narrative, Philosophy & Life. Springer. pp. 135-50.
    This paper attempts to reconcile two apparently opposed ways of thinking about the imagination and its relationship to literature, one which casts it as essentially concerned with fiction-making and the other with culture-making. The literary imagination’s power to create fictions is what gives it its most obvious claim to “autonomy”, as Kant would have it: its freedom to venture out in often wild and spectacular excess of reality. The argument of this paper is that we can locate the literary imagination’s (...)
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