Sanskrit poeticians make the visionary faculty of
pratibhā a necessary part of the professional poet’s make-up. The term has a pre-history in Bhartṛhari’s linguistic metaphysics, where
it is used to explain the unitary perception of meaning. This essay examines the relation between
pratibhā and possible theories of the imagination, with a focus on three unusual theoreticians—Rājaśekhara, Kuntaka, and Jagannātha
Paṇḍita. Rājaśekhara offers an analysis of
pratibhā that is heavily interactive, requiring the discerning presence of the
bhāvaka listener or critic; he also positions
pratibhā in relation to Bildung (
vyutpatti) and practice. For Kuntaka,
pratibhā, never an
ex nihilo creation by a poet, serves as the basis for the peculiar forms of intensified insight and experience that constitute poetry;
these may also involve the creative scrambling and re-articulation of the object in terms of its systemic composition. At
times, Kuntaka’s
pratibhā comes close to a strong notion of imaginative process. But the full-fledged thematization of the imagination, and of
pratibhā as its support and mechanism, is best seen in the seventeenth-century debates preserved for us by Jagannātha. A link is suggested
between the discourse of poetic imagination in Jagannātha and similar themes that turn up in Indo-Persian poets such as Bedil.
Keywords
Pratibhā
-
Vyutpatti
-
Abhyāsa
- Rājaśekhara - Kuntaka - Jagannātha - Bhartṛhari - Imagination - Inspiration - Bedil - Poetics