@article{Shevchenko_2022, title={The Many Selves of an Actor: Perceptibility of Second-order Characters in the Naṭāṅkuśa and Non-dualist Theories of Cognition}, volume={24}, url={https://journals.akademicka.pl/cis/article/view/4619}, DOI={10.12797/CIS.24.2022.01.06}, abstractNote={<p>This article explores artistic innovations in Kūṭiyāṭṭam theater through the lens of critique developed in the <em>Naṭāṅkuśa</em>—a polemical treatise composed, perhaps, in the 15<sup>th</sup> century Kerala. The focus is on the <em>Naṭāṅkuśa</em>’s fierce disapproval of the performance of multiple roles by an actor dressed as one and the same character—for example, switching from the role of Hanumān to that of Rāma, while still in Hanumān’s costume and make-up. The author of the <em>Naṭāṅkuśa</em> utilizes epistemological arguments to demonstrate the impossibility of accommodating more than one character in a single actor’s mind. Nor can a spectator have a stable cognition of the second- order characters. The fact that the author attributes to the opponent— a Kūṭiyāṭṭam performer—a non-dualist theory of cognition, suggests that the theory of Kūṭiyāṭṭam was inspired by Advaita Vedāntin and the non-dualist Śaiva epistemological presuppositions.</p>}, number={1}, journal={Cracow Indological Studies}, author={Shevchenko, Dimitry}, year={2022}, month={Aug.}, pages={111–130} }