Avatāra (original) (raw)

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Hinduism Avatāra

Tracy Coleman

Introduction

The term avatāra is derived from the Sanskrit ava√tṝ cross down or descend, thus commonly referring to a god’s “descent” to earth, often called an “incarnation.” The concept of such divine intervention has a long history in South Asian religions, and avatāra is just one term used to describe divine manifestations in the world. Among the most well-known of mythological avatāras are the Vaishnava daśāvatāra, the “ten descents” of Vishnu into various embodied forms whose general purpose is to rectify the balance of good and evil in the world. The classic expression of the avatāra doctrine thus says that whenever dharma declines and evil spreads, Vishnu descends to restore dharma and the proper social order, thereby protecting the good and punishing the bad. Stories of such descents are popular in India and date to the ancient epics and Puranas, where the heroic exploits of the most beloved avatāras, Rāma and Krishna, are described in thrilling detail. Beyond such textual accounts, however, are the lives of historical figures considered _avatāras_—the medieval Bengali saint Caitanya, for example, and the modern gurus Anandamayi Ma and Sathya Sai Baba, often identified with the more familiar English term avatar. If the avatāra concept was originally a Brahmanical device by which indigenous deities were assimilated into the orthodox pantheon and subordinated to Brahmanical gods who supported a highly ritualized religiosity within a hierarchical social order, then the popular avatars of the 20th and 21st centuries have universalized the ancient concept and made the benefits of divine descent and embodiment available to spiritual seekers worldwide, irrespective of traditional social and religious codes.

General Overviews

Most overviews of avatāra privilege the classical Vaishnava avatāras, with little or no discussion of the history of the concept or the phenomenon of modern avatāras. Dimmitt and van Buitenen 1978 is a reader in the Sanskrit Puranas that includes translations of various avatāra myths, with extensive treatment of Krishna. Gupta 1974 includes a number of monochrome plates in a summary treatment of Vishnu’s major and minor incarnations. In a history of early Vaishnavism, Jaiswal 1981 includes a brief but well-annotated section (pp. 129–147) on the development of the avatāra theory in the epics and the Puranas, with some discussion of Buddhism. Couture 2009 and Couture 2010 offers two entries in Brill’s Encyclopedia of Hinduism, Avatāra and Viṣṇu, each with informed discussion of scholarly studies, the history of the concept, and substantial bibliographies. Mani 1975 is an encyclopedia that includes detailed descriptions of Vishnu and his avatāras. Gonda 1954 explores connections between the Vedic Vishnu and the later avatāras, noting how Vishnu’s protective capacity develops in the early avatāra myths and finding in these the foundations for the salvific activities of the Vaishnava deities later elaborated in the traditions of bhakti.

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