ABOUT THE COVER

Krishna Storms the Citadel of Naraka (from a Bhagavata Purana). India, Karnataka, Mysore (ca. 1840). Opaque watercolor and gold on paper (25.1 cm × 36.8 cm). San Diego Museum of Art (Edwin Binney 3rd Collection)

Protect Me, Lord, from Oil, from Water, from Fire, and from Ants and Save Me from Falling into the Hands of Fools – Prayer “uttered by a manuscript.” Found at the end of medieval Indian texts Polyxeni Potter*

I

ndian paintings on paper, known as “miniatures,” can be found in books from as far back as the 11th century, most from the 14th through the 19th century. They vary from postage stamp size to more than a yard in height and are called miniatures partly to distinguish them from murals, which they followed as a genre (1). Like the good books they inhabited, they were portable and intimate, meant to be appreciated from close up and, duly treasured, they were tucked away to be handled only from time to time, with care. Miniature paintings were collaborative, created by groups of artists specialized in drawing, portraiture, background, or border illustration and were exclusively commissioned by patrons—princes, merchants, religious leaders. The importance attached to patronage can be traced in the colophons of surviving books. We know virtually nothing about the anonymous artist who created the painting but can often trace at whose “lotus feet” it was placed when completed. *Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia, USA 812

Though “All the blessings of heaven” were bestowed on the patron of a manuscript or series, great patrons did not emerge until the late 15th century. Soon after, during the Mughal Empire, interest in art peaked, along with patronage, and schools of painting developed and flourished. Miniatures were often painted on a wash: sheets of paper glued together and laminated. Ground white chalk or lead formed the foundation for layers of transparent watercolor in vivid, exotic pigments, from gum arabic or crushed seeds of the tamarind. Indian yellow was made of dried urine from cows fed on mango leaves. Gold, in leaf or liquid, embellished clothing and jewelry. Detail was created laboriously with fine brushes of hair from live squirrels, luster achieved from burnishing the surface, which also bonded pigment layers to the support (2). Book pages were intricately illustrated, some double-sided, with calligraphic elements on the verso. The folio on this month’s cover comes from the Bhagavata Purana, a celebrated text in Hindu sacred literature recited daily by millions. Though favored and revered by painters and patrons, the Purana, with its collection of “an-

Emerging Infectious Diseases • www.cdc.gov/eid • Vol. 13, No. 5, May 2007

ABOUT THE COVER

cient and wondrous tales of the Lord” Krishna, has rarely been illustrated with such exuberance (1). The embroidered cover of this manuscript, which contains 217 paintings, identifies it as volume 6 in a series. It was written on European paper. A seal on the flyleaf reads, “His Highness, Rajah of Mysore.” Eyes are naturally drawn to Krishna. His name literally means “black” or “dark” or “all-attractive,” and he has a very distinct iconography. In his countless avatars, from Vishnu to simple human, his beauty is irresistible, his complexion “tinged with the hue of blue clouds” (3). Clad in golden silk, he rides the sun-bird Garuda. The philosophy of this God/cowherd is captured in the epic of the Hindu faith, the Bhagavad-Gita (4). Krishna Storms the Citadel of Naraka recounts the God’s exploits against a demon king, a menace who commits atrocities, even against his own mother, the Earth Goddess. Aboard Garuda with his consort Satyabhama, Krishna wings his way to the demon’s citadel, “Which heart would not quail at the loud blast …from the Lord’s conch?” (1). The enemy is barricaded in his impregnable island city, inaccessible by “hilly fortifications and mounted missiles and weaponry” and unapproachable with “moats of water and fire and belts of stormy winds” (1). Krishna, in true form, is Vishnu, four-armed and impervious to “thousands of fearful and strong snares” (1). He faces Mura, the five-headed demon (upper right), who soon falls, “like a mountain summit struck by a thunderbolt.” Mura’s seven sons move in, advancing, “discharging volleys of shafts, swords, maces, darts, double-edged swords and javelins” to perish too, along with their armies (1). Naraka joins in and succumbs to Krishna, who appears everywhere, “like a cloud emblazoned in a streak of lightning” (1). The citadel is penetrated. Inside, the Earth Goddess, bowing, offers Krishna “a pair of earrings resplendent with jewels and chased in the purest gold…a garland of forest flowers, the umbrella of Varuna…” (1).

The unfolding spectacle encompasses the heavens, engaging with ease gods, humans, animals, and mythologic beasts. Tiny figures move about purposefully, elephants carry on with dignity, seas are alive with fish. The monumental story is painted with assurance, as if it could have happened only in this orderly and brilliant way. And flying arrows and severed heads notwithstanding, the event seems a pageant, the celebration of a shift in the balance of power, an interaction whose outcome was never in doubt. The citadel of Naraka with its formidable fortifications and hordes of defenders begs an equivalent in the microbial world. And not only because vermin threaten everything, even books. In the eternal, complicated interactions between microbes and hosts, supremacy and survival are closely knit. Host defenses are inevitably overcome by adaptation and change, until more sophisticated, specialized defenses can be built. Microbes develop resistance. Hosts mount additional defense. Microbes regroup and reappear in manifestations and avatars rivaling those of Krishna himself. References 1. 2. 3. 4.

Goswamy BN, Smith C. Domains of wonder: selected masterworks of Indian painting. Frome, Somerset (UK): Butler and Tanner, Ltd; 2005. A stream of stories: Indian miniatures [cited 2007 Mar 23]. Available from http://www.nga.gov.au/Conservation/Paper/IndianMiniatures. html Sri Brahma-samhita. Chapter 5 verse 30 [cited 2007 Mar 14]. Available from http://www.vedabase.net/bs/5/30/en1 Prabhavananda S, Isherwood C. (translators). The song of God: Bhagavad-Gita. London: Phoenix House Ltd; 1964.

Address for correspondence: Polyxeni Potter, EID Journal, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 1600 Clifton Rd, Mailstop D61, Atlanta, GA 30333, USA; email: [email protected]

The Public Health Image Library (PHIL) The Public Health Image Library (PHIL), Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, contains thousands of public health-related images, including high-resolution (print quality) photographs, illustrations, and videos. PHIL collections illustrate current events and articles, supply visual content for health promotion brochures, document the effects of disease, and enhance instructional media. PHIL Images, accessible to PC and Macintosh users, are in the public domain and available without charge. Visit PHIL at http://phil.cdc.gov/phil.

Emerging Infectious Diseases • www.cdc.gov/eid • Vol. 13, No. 5, May 2007

813

Protect Me, Lord, from Oil, from Water, from Fire ... - Semantic Scholar

Goswamy BN, Smith C. Domains of wonder: selected masterworks of Indian painting. Frome ... users, are in the public domain and available without charge.

249KB Sizes 1 Downloads 278 Views

Recommend Documents

Protect Me, Lord, from Oil, from Water, from Fire ... - Semantic Scholar
ground, or border illustration and were exclusively com- missioned by ... the Mughal Empire, interest in art peaked, along with pa- tronage, and schools of ...

Help Protect Kids from Cyberbullying
cyberbullying (or online bullying) opens the door to 24-hour harassment through ... comments or belittle the victim's friends on a blog. Pretend to befriend ...

Help Protect Kids from Cyberbullying
embarrassing pictures on a social website like Facebook, or share a humiliating ... an instant messaging (IM) buddy list or social networking page, for example.

Learning Articulation from Cepstral Coefficients - Semantic Scholar
Parallel and Distributed Processing Laboratory, Department of Applied Informatics,. University ... training set), namely the fsew0 speaker data from the MOCHA.

Learning Articulation from Cepstral Coefficients - Semantic Scholar
2-3cm posterior from the tongue blade sensor), and soft palate. Two channels for every sensor ... (ν−SVR), Principal Component Analysis (PCA) and Indepen-.

Generating Arabic Text from Interlingua - Semantic Scholar
Computer Science Dept.,. Faculty of ... will be automated computer translation of spoken. English into .... such as verb-subject, noun-adjective, dem- onstrated ...

TEXTLINE INFORMATION EXTRACTION FROM ... - Semantic Scholar
Camera-Captured Document Image Segmentation. 1. INTRODUCTION. Digital cameras are low priced, portable, long-ranged and non-contact imaging devices as compared to scanners. These features make cameras suitable for versatile OCR related ap- plications

Learning from weak representations using ... - Semantic Scholar
how to define a good optimization argument, and the problem, like clustering, is an ... function space F · G. This search is often intractable, leading to high .... Linear projections- Learning a linear projection A is equivalent to learning a low r

INFERRING LEARNERS' KNOWLEDGE FROM ... - Semantic Scholar
In Experiment 1, we validate the model by directly comparing its inferences to participants' stated beliefs. ...... Journal of Statistical Software, 25(14), 1–14. Razzaq, L., Feng, M., ... Learning analytics via sparse factor analysis. In Personali

Persistent structural priming from language ... - Semantic Scholar
b NTT Communication Science Laboratories, 2-4 Hikari-dai, Seika-cho, ... c Department of Psychology, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada, H3A 1B1.

Mutation Rate Inferred From Synonymous ... - Semantic Scholar
Aug 1, 2011 - 1999). Both methods have limitations. The former requires knowledge of the ... Supporting information is available online at http://www.g3journal.org/lookup/ · suppl/doi:10.1534/g3.111.000406/-/DC1 .... mated point-mutation rates for th

INFERRING LEARNERS' KNOWLEDGE FROM ... - Semantic Scholar
We use a variation of inverse reinforcement learning to infer these beliefs. ...... Twenty-Second International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence (IJCAI) (p.

Extracting Protein-Protein Interactions from ... - Semantic Scholar
Existing statistical approaches to this problem include sliding-window methods (Bakiri and Dietterich, 2002), hidden Markov models (Rabiner, 1989), maximum ..... MAP estimation methods investigated in speech recognition experiments (Iyer et al.,. 199

Tree detection from aerial imagery - Semantic Scholar
Nov 6, 2009 - automatic model and training data selection to minimize the manual work and .... of ground-truth tree masks, we introduce methods for auto-.

Learning from weak representations using ... - Semantic Scholar
was one of the best in my life, and their friendship has a lot to do with that. ...... inherent structure of the data can be more easily unravelled (see illustrations in ...

TEXTLINE INFORMATION EXTRACTION FROM ... - Semantic Scholar
because of the assumption that more characters lie on baseline than on x-line. After each deformation iter- ation, the distances between each pair of snakes are adjusted and made equal to average distance. Based on the above defined features of snake

Affective Modeling from Multichannel Physiology - Semantic Scholar
1 School of Electrical and Information Engineering, University of Sydney, Australia ..... Andre, E.: Emotion Recognition Based on Physiological Changes in Music.

Extracting Collocations from Text Corpora - Semantic Scholar
1992) used word collocations as features to auto- matically discover similar nouns of a ..... training 0.07, work 0.07, standard 0.06, ban 0.06, restriction 0.06, ...

Extracting Protein-Protein Interactions from ... - Semantic Scholar
statistical methods for mining knowledge from texts and biomedical data mining. ..... the Internet with the keyword “protein-protein interaction”. Corpuses I and II ...

Generating Arabic Text from Interlingua - Semantic Scholar
intention rather than literal meaning. The IF is a task-based representation ..... In order to comply with Arabic grammar rules, our. Arabic generator overrides the ...

SUPERMANIFOLDS FROM FEYNMAN GRAPHS ... - Semantic Scholar
Feynman graphs, namely they generate the Grothendieck ring of varieties. ... showed that the Ward identities define a Hopf ideal in the Connes–Kreimer Hopf.

No Negative Semantic Priming From Unconscious ... - Semantic Scholar
Libre de Bruxelles, Brussels, Belgium, and National Fund for Scientific. Research–Belgium ..... ripheral energy masking, whereas both meanings of the polysemous prime words ... This alternative interpretation is more consonant with Tipper's.

No Negative Semantic Priming From Unconscious ... - Semantic Scholar
Laboratory (MEL; Version 2.01) software (for a descriptive article, see. Schneider, 1988). Stimuli were ..... with both the prime and the probe in the participants' first lan- guage. .... positive semantic priming with the digit monitoring task, for

Protect Yourself from Investment Fraud Pamphlet_Printable.pdf ...
Whoops! There was a problem loading more pages. Retrying... Protect Yourself from Investment Fraud Pamphlet_Printable.pdf. Protect Yourself from Investment ...