This article is within the scope of WikiProject India, which aims to improve Wikipedia's coverage of India-related topics. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page.IndiaWikipedia:WikiProject IndiaTemplate:WikiProject IndiaIndia articles
This article is within the scope of WikiProject Hinduism, a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of Hinduism on Wikipedia. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join the discussion and see a list of open tasks.HinduismWikipedia:WikiProject HinduismTemplate:WikiProject HinduismHinduism articles
This article is within the scope of WikiProject Literature, a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of Literature on Wikipedia. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join the discussion and see a list of open tasks.LiteratureWikipedia:WikiProject LiteratureTemplate:WikiProject LiteratureLiterature articles
Varanasi is a very holy city. It has a special place in the collective Hindu psyche. The centrality of this city in the Hindu worldview has a direct bearing upon its presence in various forms of literature, either directly upon the city itself, or having the city in a kind of central role. Of course there are many literary works that mention Varanasi occasionally, but that will not be called city literature. The literary presence of the city of Varanasi or Kashi, as it is invariably called in Sanskrit literature, can be conveniently understood by looking at the city literature divided into three groups, based on its language: Sanskrit, Hindi and English.
Varanasi or Kashi is present in various Puranas, praised as the holiest of the holy cities. The most notable example of one such purana is Skandmahapuran[1] that has one large book with one hundred chapters on Varanasi. The section is called the Kashi Khanda or section. In addition to the purans there are various compendiums on places of pilgrimage that keep praising the three tirthas: Kashi, Prayag (Allahabad) and Gaya.[2]. Pandit Jagannath's Gangalahari was composed in Sanskrit in Varanasi and praises the holy Ganga that flows through the city. Many of the Jataka Tales begin as,'Long time ago, in the city of Kashi...'. That shows the importance of the city in national life, and explained its presence in literature.
From the origin of Hindi literature, or poetry, as prose came later, Varanasi had a role to play in its development.[3]. The first great Hindi (in the Awadhi dialect) poet to write in praise of Varanasi was Goswami Tulsidas. He wrote a long panegyric of the city: 'Why won't one praise the city of Kashi where dwell Shiva and his consort?'[4]. Varanasi was the birth place of modern Hindi literature and language, because Bhartendu Harishchandra, the father of the khadi boli dialect, that was later standardized into Hindi of modern usage, dominated the literary scene throughout his active life span. He wrote beautifully on his city both in prose and verse. A special mention must be made of his play: Premjogini that is not only set in the city, but makes the city its protagonist. After Bhartendu came Munshi Premchand. His stories and many of his novels are set in the city of Varanasi and give it a lot of importance.
Shiv Parasad Mishra 'Rudar Kashikey', Kashi Nath Singh and Shiv Prasad Singh are the three noteworthy writers who wrote short stories and novels centered on the city of Varanasi.[5], [6]
In comparison to literature in the other two languages, English literature has fewer works that give Varanasi the central position. Pankaj Mishra's The Romantics is a novel in which many chapters are set in the city of Varanasi. It succeeds in following the diurnal and seasonal rhythms of the city. Charu Sheel Singh's Kashi: A Mandala Poem is one long poem on the city of Kashi that synthesizes puranic myths with modern science and postmodern to create a modern day epic on the city.