Dharmanand Kosambi
The Essential Writings

Edited, Translated, and with an Introduction by Meera Kosambi

The life and writings of Dharmanand Kosambi (1876–1947), pioneering
scholar of Pali and Buddhist Studies, comprise the substance of this
book.

Born in rural Goa, Dharmanand came under the spell of the Buddha’s
teachings during his adolescence. As described in his long
autobiographical memoir (included here), at an early age he set off on
an incredible journey of austere self-training across the length and
breadth of Britain’s Indian Empire, halting to educate himself at
places connected with Buddhism. His sojourns included living in Sri
Lanka to master Pali as a novitiate-scholar, in a Burmese cave as a
bhikshu, and in some viharas of North India—begging for monastic
sustenance—as well as in Nepal and Sikkim which he reached after
arduous, sometimes barefoot, treks. Over these itinerant years
Dharmanand acquired such mastery of the Buddhist canon that he was
variously appointed to teach and research at Calcutta, Baroda,
Harvard, and Leningrad.

As a thinker Dharmanand blended Buddhist ethics, Mahatma Gandhi’s
philosophy of truth and non-violence, and the ideals of socialism. He
exchanged letters with the Mahatma, worked for his causes, and died in
the approved Buddhist/Jain manner by voluntary starvation at Sevagram
ashram. Arguably, no Indian scholar’s life has been as exemplary as
Dharmanand’s, or has approximated as closely to the nobility and
saintliness of the Mahatma’s.

Despite his mastery of several languages, Dharmanand chose to write in
Marathi because of his strong region-specific commitment.
Consequently, very few today are familiar with his copious output in
Buddhist Studies, and fewer still with his contribution to social and
political thought.

By translating and marshalling his most significant writings, Meera
Kosambi shows the manifold dimensions of Dharmanand’s personality, and
the profoundly moral character of his intellectual journeys. Her
Introduction also contextualizes the life, career, and achievement of
one of modern India’s greatest scholar-savants.

MEERA KOSAMBI is a sociologist trained in India, Sweden, and the USA.
She has specialized in Urban Studies and Women’s Studies. She was
formerly Professor and Director of the Research Centre for Women’s
Studies at the SNDT Women’s University in Mumbai. She has taught,
lectured, and published widely in India and abroad. Her books include
Returning the American Gaze: Pandita Ramabai’s ‘The Peoples of the
United States’ (1889) (2003), Crossing Thresholds: Feminist Essays in
Social History (2007), and Feminist Vision or ‘Treason against Men’?
Kashibai Kanitkar and the Engendering of Marathi Literature (2008).

HARDBACK / 430PP incl. 5 b/w photos / Rs 695 / ISBN 81-7824-303-2 /
WORLD RIGHTS / Publication date August 2010
* * *

IS YOURS one of the stories of Goans on board the S.S.
Dwarka, or at the Strait of Hormuz, Basra or Bahrain, Dubai,
Swindon, Mombasa, Poona or Rangoon? Selma Carvalho's new book
*Into the Diaspora Wilderness* docks at many other ports. Get
your copy from Broadways, Panjim [9822488564] Rs 295. P&p
extra. http://selmacarvalho.squarespace.com/

Reply via email to