Can Nāstikas Taste Āstika Poetry? Tagore’s Poetry and the Critique of Secularity

Sophia 60 (3):677-697 (2021)
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Abstract

This paper asks the following question: can an atheist reader fully taste the aesthetic meaning of poetry written by a theist author? This question is discussed with specific reference to the devotional poetry of Tagore. The paper discusses forms of pre-modern religious thinking which influenced Tagore’s conceptions of God, his relation to Nature, human society, and the human self. But it stresses that Tagore’s time was different from those of pre-modern believers. Tagore, as a modern thinker, had to fashion a response to the ‘problem’ of disenchantment. He constructed a philosophic vision that embraced modern science, but argued that it did not dispel the sense of living in an enchanted universe. Consequently, it is argued that a nastika can enjoy his poetry. This requires the nastika to view the idea of God not as a failure of cognition, but as a triumph of the imagination. I can continue to enjoy Tagore’s poetry without unease.

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References found in this work

A Secular Age.Charles Taylor - 2007 - Harvard University Press.
The power of the sacred: an alternative to the narrative of disenchantment.Hans Joas - 2021 - New York, NY, United States of America: Oxford University Press. Edited by Alex Skinner.

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