Jnandev Studies, vols. I and II: Songs on Yoga: Teaching of the Maharastrian Naths; vol. III: The Conservative Vaisnava: Anonymous Songs of the Jnandev Gatha.
Novetzke, Christine Lee
Jnandev Studies, vols. I and II: Songs on Yoga: Teaching of the
Maharastrian Naths; vol. III: The Conservative Vaisnava: Anonymous Songs
of the Jnandev Gatha. By CATHARINA KIEHNLE. Alt- und Neu-Indische
Studien, vols. 48.1 and 2. Stuttgart: FRANZ STEINER VERLAG, 1998. Pp. vi
+ 352; 123.
In two exceptional volumes Kiehnle packages three critically edited
texts in Old Marathi, attributed to the thirteenth-century Marathi saint
(sant) Jnandev, who is remembered as the author of the Jnanesvari, a
commentary and translation of the Bhagavadgita in Old Marathi. In Songs
on Yoga, Kiehnle offers a critical edition, apparatus and translation of
the Lakhota, or "Sealed Letter," and the Yogapar Abhangamala,
or "a collection of songs (abhang) on yoga." Both texts are
about the experience and practice of yoga from the perspective of the
Maharastrian Nath tradition. In The Conservative Vaisnava, Kiehnle
assembles, critically edits, and translates fifty songs attributed to
Jnandev in the Jnandev Gatha. She gives the collection the title
Anusthanapath or "Litany of Observances." As this title
implies, the Anusthana path deals with proper behavior within the
Varkari tradition of Maharastra.
In a thorough introduction to Songs on Yoga, Kiehnle analyzes the
problems of authorship, collation, and translation, while she explores
the relationship of the broader Nath tradition to its particular
manifestation in Maharastra. Through a detailed treatment of the
language of the two texts, she produces something like a primer for the
practical study of Old Marathi, adding texture and clarification to
Alfred Master's A Grammar of Old Marathi. Perhaps most impressive
is the exhaustive commentary Kiehnle sets alongside her translation of
the Lakhota. She employs a wide range of sources, such as the Jnanesvari
and the songs of other Marathi saints; she draws from unpanisadicv and
siddhanta texts, Muktananda's Citsakti Vilas, and Kabir's
Sakhi; and she makes use of accounts of Ramakrishna's yogic
visions. As Kiehnle points out, the Lakhota is a "sealed
letter," filled with enigmatic symbols and coded instructions. Her
commentary provides a meticulous interpretation of the songs'
possible meanings.
Part two contains a critical edition and translation of Yogapar
Abhangamalu, a compilation of verses similar to the Lakhota in subject
but not as ornate in poetics or concise in presentation. Kiehnle devotes
less attention to it because she observes there a greater philological inconsistency, a higher occurrence of modern Marathi, and a paucity of
old manuscripts available for critically editing this collection.
In The Conservative Vaisnava, Kiehnle constructs a text from
anonymous songs of the Jnandev Gatha and names the collection the
Anusthanpath, or "Litany of Observances." Kiehnle bases this
compilation on twenty-seven songs published in the Marathi journal
Mumuksy in 1927. To these she adds twenty three songs from the Jnandev
Gatha. Kiehnle discovers that all fifty songs are absent from the Old
Marathi manuscripts she consulted for Songs on Yoga, and hence her
treatment of this text is quite different from that of the previous two
texts. Whereas Songs on Yoga contains a philological analysis, Kiehnle
uses anthropological categories in The Conservative Vaisnava. She
invokes Turner structure, counter-structure, and anti-structure
paradigms, as well as the analytical binary sets proposed by Ramanujan
in his introduction to Speaking of Siva (e.g., sthavarajangama). Kiehnle
applies these theoretical conventions to the language of the
anusthanapath, as she might to an ethnographic study, in order to draw
conclusions about its author, the Varkari religion, and Maharastrian
Vasinavism in general.
More daring, Kiehnle's second book is also more problematic.
Using Turner's ideas, she raises the question of bhakti's
supposed failure as social protest, an issue other scholars have
addressed. In particular, she finds the normative prescriptions of the
Anusthanapath at odds with Jnandev as a Nath yogi and a Varkari devotee.
She writes: "For such an individual, caste distinctions and the
like should be ridiculous, and the question arises why such a
destructive potential never led to social unrest or revolution" (p.
7). The answer to Kiehnle's question is predictable: "It is
obvious that the anti- structure spontaneity caused by real experience
is buried here under rules" (p. 29). Indeed, if Kiehnle wants to
find anti-structure, she must look elsewhere than in a collection of
songs devoted to correct "observance" of norms, that is, to
"structure." Perhaps a better choice would have been her
edition of the Lakhota, a deeply counter-structural text composed for an
exclusive community of Maharastrian Nath yog is existing at the margins
of brahminical orthodoxy.
Kiehnle seems to regard the Anusthanapath as mundane, particularly
when set against the esoteric Lakhota and Yogapar Abhanigamala, As she
writes, "the songs do not contain much more than a survey of ideas
prevalent in the Varkari community" (p. 30). However, Kiehnle
succeeds in lucidly depicting important features of Varkari religious
practice through her application of Turner's categories. Moreover,
the three texts placed together portray a religious ethos prevalent in
the songs of other Marathi saints, that is, the experience of living
between domesticity and detachment, akin to what Madan termed
"non-renunciation." [1]
A persistent puzzle for Kiehnle in her study of Jnandev is
authorship, which she addresses in a number of ways. She brings the two
texts of Songs on Yoga to bear on the debate over whether the Jnandev
who composed the Jnanesvari is also the author of the Haripath, Lakhota,
and Yogapar Abhangamata. She points out that the Jnanesvari was composed
in the ovi metre, a form Kiehnle believes is a precursor to the abhag
metre. The Lakhota is primarily in the abhang metre, a poetic form
described by another Marathi saint, Namdev (1270-1350). Kiehnle observes
that in the Jnanesvari the word abhang means "without break"
and does not refer to a type of singing metre. This leads her to suspect
that the composer of the Jnanesvari was unaware of the metre of the
Likhota. While his does not disprove that one author could have composed
both collections, Kiehnle does cast doubt on the assumption that one
Jnandev was responsible for both texts.
Kiehnle considers also the issue of authorship in The Conservative
Vaisnava. Through her application of Turner's ideas, she suggests
that the very different content of the Anusthanapath songs vis-a-vis the
Lakhota and the Abhangamala songs points toward the possibility of
multiple authors. She also finds the linguistic and philosophical
sophistication of the Jnanesvari at odds with the "sometimes...
clumsy and faulty expressions" of the Anusthanapath (p. 40).
Kiehnle calls the author of the Anusthanapath, "the conservative
Vaisnava" because she considers the prescriptions of the song to be
socially and religiously conservative. Kiehnle concludes that the
"conservative Vaisnava" could not have been the author of the
Jnanesvari or of the Haripath and those collections similar to it, such
as the Lakhota (p. 52). Hence she proposes the possibility of two
Jnandevs (or more), who may or may not have been contemporaries. These
ideas about authorship lead Kiehnle to suggest the existence of a
"Jnandev school" where individuals who followed Janadev's
teachings and styles of composition continued to Write in his name and
"sign" verses with his mudrika or "little seal" (p.
2). Her arguments are compelling and might favor a study of Jnandev as a
kind of religious and literary institution where authorship, authority,
and continuity can be engaged as elements of an historical practice.
Songs on Yoga and The Conservative Vaisnava greatly extend our
understanding of Jnandev and the legacy that surrounds his name,
particularly the Maharastrian Nath religion and its relationship to
other Nath sects of India. The study of Hinduism would benefit from a
better understanding of Maharastrian religion, history, and literature.
Kiehnle's Jnandev Studies are an important step toward realizing
this ambition, which would be made more feasible by an inventory of
available Marathi manuscripts. Kiehnle's exemplary critical
endeavors and clear treatment of Old Marathi grammar will become
indispensable to scholars of other Old Marathi texts. Her commentary on
the Lakhota should serve as a model and resource for subsequent
explorations of the Nath tradition remembered in song. Moreover,
Kiehnle's scholarship provides readers with a meticulous
exploration of Jnandev and his legacy and sets a high standard for the
study of Maharastra's religious and literary history overall.
(1.) T. N. Madan, Non-Renunciation (Delhi: Oxford Univ. Press,
1987), 10.