Panglot World Languages
Dr Alexander O'Neill of Musashino University in Tokyo returns to the podcast to explain to us the history, significance, cultural output, and current-day relevance of Sanskrit and its relatives Prakrit and Pali. There was a time when Sanskrit speakers could be found all the way from Central Asia to Indonesia. It was a unifying lingua franca that was the centre of education, that books were written in, and that intellectuals would debate each other in on demand (in verse!). It was like Latin was to Europe, except even more important. Literature in Classical Sanskrit covers a huge range, from religious texts and royal decrees to mathematics, astronomy, so-called mirrors for princes (i.e. self-help books for kings) and, famously, the Kama Sutra. And Vedic Sanskrit is the language of the Vedas, passed down through oral tradition over literally thousands of years. It's the only example I've heard of of a language preserved not through writing, but through generations of memorising ritual speech. Classical Sanskrit also had what we might call "daughter languages" Prakrit and Pali. All of these were constructed languages in the sense that they seem not to have been codifications of a language that was spoken, but a codified adaptation from spoken language (the work "Sanskrit" itself means "constructed" or "perfect"). Each of these has had their own role to play in the culture of Central, South and Southeast Asia, and in particular in the religious traditions, literature, and drama of these regions. There is even a modern movement to revive Sanskrit as a spoken language! Dr O'Neill also shares how reading the original Buddhist texts differs from reading them in translation, and the value of understanding the languages themselves. Enjoy the episode. ---------------------------------------- Find out more about our work at panglotlanguages.com [http://panglotlanguages.com] .
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