33. Ibid., 116.
34. Urban, The Power of Tantra, loc.254; Urban, The Economics of Ecstasy, loc.556.
35. Tharu and Lalita, Women Writing in India, 8.
36. Ibid., 2.
37. Ibid., 145
38. Ibid., 3.
39. Ibid.
40. Ibid., 5–6.
41. Ibid., 6.
42. Wujastyk, “Indian Manuscripts,” 1–2.
43. Ibid.
44. Dominik Wujastyk, e-mail to author, December 19, 2012.
45. Wujastyk, “Indian Manuscripts,” 2.
46. Dominik Wujastyk, e-mail to author, December 13, 2012.
47. Wujastyk, “Indian Manuscripts,” 3.
48. Copyright © 1998 by Andrew Schelling. Reprinted with the permission of City Lights Books. Schelling, The Cane Groves of Narmada River, 48.
49. Ibid., 149.
50. Ibid.
51. Rotter, “Gender Relations, Foreign Relations: The United States and South Asia, 1947–1964,” 523.
52. Ibid., 527.
53. Conrad, Heart of Darkness and Selections from the Congo Diary, loc. 1881, 2028, 1886.
54. Ibid., loc. 1011, 1454.
55. Gleick, The Information, 418.
56. Ibid., 436.
57. Ibid., 217.
Chapter 9: The Language of Literature
1. Translated from Anandavardhana’s Dhvanyaloka (3.41 a) by Luther Obrock.
2. Bronner and Shulman, “’A Cloud Turned Goose’: Sanskrit in the Vernacular Millennium,” 28–29.
3. Pollock, “The Death of Sanskrit,” 394.
4. Dalmia, “Sanskrit Scholars and Pandits of the Old School,” 334.
5. See Srinivas, “Amarabhāratī: Sanskrit and the Resurgence of Indian Civilization,” 41–42.
6. Kapoor and Ratnam, Literary Theory: Indian Conceptual Framework, 1.
7. Ramaswamy, “Sanskrit for the Nation,” 334–35.
8. Ibid., 373.
9. Pollock, “The Cosmopolitan Vernacular,” 29.
10. Merwin, East Window: The Asian Translations, 36.
11. Eliot, The Sacred Wood and Major Early Essays, 58.
12. Eliot, After Strange Gods, 43–44.
13. Sanderson, “Śaivism and the Tantric Traditions,” 675.
14. Christiansen, “Computers.”
15. Pipher, Writing to Change the World, 81.
16. Tedd, “Hours of Hell and Anguish,” 95.
17. Ibid., 97.
18. West, Conversations with William Styron, 9.
19. Review, The Paris Review Interviews, III, 22.
20. Ingersoll and Ingersoll, Conversations with Anthony Burgess, 73.
21. Fisher, The Writer’s Quotebook, 18.
22. Acocella, “Blocked: Why Do Writers Stop Writing?,” 129.
23. Leeds, The Enduring Vision of Norman Mailer, 132.
24. Cowley, And I Worked at the Writer’s Trade, 191.
25. Tedd, “Hours of Hell and Anguish,” 99.
26. Ingalls Sr., Masson, and Patwardhan, The Dhvanyaloka of Anandavardhana with the Locana of Abhinavagupta, 120.
27. Matilal, “Vakroti and Dhvani: Controversies about the Theory of Poetry in the Indian Tradition,” 381.
28. Parashar and Rājaśekhara, Kāvyamīmāṃsā of Rājaśekhara, 149.
29. Gnoli and Abhinavagupta, The Aesthetic Experience According to Abhinavagupta, XLIX.
30. Muller-Ortega, The Triadic Heart of Śiva, 46.
Chapter 10: Application.Restart()
1. Muller-Ortega, “Seal of Sambhu,” 574.
2. “Fwd: Amar Chitra Katha Comics in Samskritam: Participate in Readership Survey—Google Groups.”
3. Singh, “New Life, Old Death for Sanskrit in Uttarakhand.”
4. Toole, Ada, the Enchantress of Numbers, loc. 2867–870.
5. Turing, “On Computable Numbers, with an Application to the Entscheidungs-problem (1936).”
6. Toole, Ada, the Enchantress of Numbers, loc. 2131–133.
7. Gleick, The Information, loc. 2048–052.
8. Cabanne, Dialogues with Marcel Duchamp, 18–19.
9. Fishwick, “Aesthetic Computing.”
10. Hessel, Goodman, and Kotler, “Hacking the President’s DNA.”
11. Kotler, “Synthetic Biology for Dummies, Investors or Both …”; Carlson, “The Pace and Proliferation of Biological Technologies.”
12. “iGEM 2012 HS Is Officially Over!”
13. “Team: Heidelberg LSL.”
14. Swain, “Glowing Trees Could Light Up City Streets,” 21.
15. Brown, “Stanford Team Turns DNA into a Hard Drive.”
16. Church and Regis, Regenesis, 7.
17. Ibid., 248–49.
18. Pollock, “What Was Bhaṭṭa Nāyaka Saying?,” 154.
19. Skora, “The Pulsating Heart and Its Divine Sense Energies,” 445–46.
20. Flood, “The Purification of the Body,” 518–19.
21. Skora, “Abhinavagupta’s Erotic Mysticism: The Reconciliation of Spirit and Flesh,” 76.
22. Reprinted with the permission of P.N. Furbank. “Messages from the Unseen World,” The Turing Digital Archive, King’s College, University of Cambridge.
23. Cabanne, Dialogues with Marcel Duchamp, 98.
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