Explanation of Abhinaya and Related Topics (अभिनयादिनिरूपणम्) — Agni Purana, Chapter 341
अव्युत्पन्नोक्तिरखिलैर् अर्भकोक्त्योपलक्ष्यते तेनार्भकोक्तिश्छाया तन्मात्रोक्तिमनुकुर्वती
avyutpannoktirakhilair arbhakoktyopalakṣyate tenārbhakoktiśchāyā tanmātroktimanukurvatī
ពាក្យសម្តីគ្រប់ប្រភេទដែលមិនទាន់បណ្តុះបណ្តាល ឬមិនទាន់ចេះច្បាស់ ត្រូវបានទទួលស្គាល់ថា «អರ್ಭកោក្តិ» (សម្តីកុមារ)។ ដូច្នេះ «ឆាយា» (ស្រមោលកាព្យ) ដែលហៅថា អರ್ಭកោក្តិ គឺជាការប្រៀបធ្វើតាមតែសម្តីប្រភេទនោះប៉ុណ្ណោះ។
Lord Agni (instructing the sage Vasiṣṭha in encyclopedic topics, here: poetics/alaṅkāra-śāstra)
Vidya Category: {"primary_vidya":"Alamkara","secondary_vidya":"Samanya","practical_application":"To deliberately craft a poetic 'shadow' (chaya) that mimics rustic/childlike, untrained speech for characterization, humor, or realism without breaking overall aesthetic control.","sutra_style":true}
Encyclopedic Reference: {"reference_type":"Definition","entry_title":"Arbhakokti-chaya (Childlike-speech semblance)","lookup_keywords":["arbhakokti","chaya","avyutpanna-ukti","vakrokti","character-speech"],"quick_summary":"Arbhakokti is the label for unsophisticated/childlike utterance; its poetic chaya is the controlled imitation of that register to achieve a specific stylistic effect."}
Alamkara Type: Chaya (semblance) / Vakrokti-register imitation
Concept: Aesthetic efficacy can arise from deliberate imitation of non-elite speech when governed by poetic intention and propriety (auchitya).
Application: In drama/kavya, assign arbhakokti-chaya to children, simpletons, or rustic scenes to heighten realism and rasa without mere error.
Khanda Section: Sahitya-shastra (Kavya & Vakrokti/Arbhakokti – Poetics and stylistics)
Primary Rasa: hasya
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A poet-scribe demonstrates two lines: one refined, one intentionally childlike with simple words and naive phrasing, while a small child speaks nearby; the 'shadow' of speech is shown as a faint echo behind the written verse.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala temple mural style, warm earthy palette, a seated kavi with palm-leaf manuscript, a child speaking simple words, subtle ghosted text behind the verse indicating chaya, traditional interior with oil lamp, flat decorative detailing","tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting, kavi seated on ornate platform, gold-leaf highlights on manuscript and borders, a child with playful gesture, stylized Sanskrit letters as decorative motif, rich reds and greens, temple-like backdrop","mysore_prompt":"Mysore painting style, fine linework, instructional tableau: two speech bubbles labeled 'avyutpanna' and 'chaya', kavi pointing to manuscript, soft pastel background, minimal but precise ornamentation","mughal_miniature_prompt":"Mughal miniature, courtly poet in a study, marginalia showing a rustic childlike utterance, delicate calligraphy panels, subdued colors, detailed textiles, a faint mirrored line to indicate imitation"}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"instructional","suggested_raga":"Hamsadhvani","pace":"medium","voice_tone":"instructional"}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: अव्युत्पन्नोक्तिः = अव्युत्पन्न-उक्तिः; अर्भकोक्त्योपलक्ष्यते = अर्भक-उक्त्या उपलक्ष्यते; तेनार्भकोक्तिः = तेन अर्भक-उक्तिः; अर्भकोक्तिश्छाया = अर्भक-उक्तिः छाया; तन्मात्रोक्तिमनुकुर्वती = तत्-मात्र-उक्तिम् अनुकुर्वती
Related Themes: Agni Purana 341.25 (mattōkti-chaya); Agni Purana 341.27 (ukti definition)
A technical point of kavya-vidya (Sahitya-shastra): it defines ‘arbha-kokti’ as untrained/childlike speech and explains that its poetic ‘chaya’ is a deliberate stylistic imitation of that speech.
Beyond ritual and dharma, the Agni Purana also codifies arts and sciences; here it records a precise definition from Sanskrit poetics, showing the text’s wide-ranging, encyclopedic treatment of literary theory alongside other disciplines.
Its significance is indirect: by teaching refined discernment in speech and literature (vāṅmaya), it supports dharmic cultivation of learning and right expression, traditionally regarded as meritorious when pursued for knowledge and discipline.