Explanation of Abhinaya and Related Topics (अभिनयादिनिरूपणम्) — Agni Purana, Chapter 341
धर्मोपघातजश्चित्तविलासजनितस् तथा शोकः शोकाद्भवेत् स्थायी कः स्थायी पूर्वजो मतः
dharmopaghātajaścittavilāsajanitas tathā śokaḥ śokādbhavet sthāyī kaḥ sthāyī pūrvajo mataḥ
ຄວາມໂສກ (śoka) ເກີດຈາກການທໍາລາຍ ຫຼື ລະເມີດທຳມະ (dharma) ແລະ ຍັງເກີດຈາກຄວາມເຄື່ອນໄຫວຫຼາກຫຼາຍຂອງຈິດ (citta-vilāsa) ດ້ວຍ. ຈາກຄວາມໂສກ ກ່າວວ່າພາວະທີ່ຕັ້ງມັ່ນ (sthayin) ເກີດຂຶ້ນ. ອາລົມໃດທີ່ບັນດາບູຮານຈານເຫັນວ່າເປັນພາວະຕັ້ງມັ່ນດັ່ງເດີມ?
Lord Agni (instructing the sage Vasiṣṭha in the Agni Purana’s poetics section)
Vidya Category: {"primary_vidya":"Alamkara","secondary_vidya":"Philosophy","practical_application":"Diagnosing the narrative causes of karuṇa (pathos) by tracing śoka to dharma-injury and mental agitation; helps poets/dramatists craft credible tragic triggers and sustained emotional tone (sthāyibhāva).","sutra_style":true}
Encyclopedic Reference: {"reference_type":"Commentary","entry_title":"Śoka-hetu and Sthāyibhāva: Dharma-upaghāta and Citta-vilāsa","lookup_keywords":["śoka","dharma-upaghāta","citta-vilāsa","sthāyibhāva","karuṇa"],"quick_summary":"Grief arises from violation/injury of dharma and from mental emotional turbulence; from śoka the abiding emotion (sthāyin) is established—an analytic tool for constructing karuṇa-rasa."}
Concept: Dharma’s disruption destabilizes the mind and becomes a root-cause for sorrow; stable emotions (sthāyin) are understood through causal analysis.
Application: In storytelling, anchor tragedy in a clear dharma-breach (betrayal, injustice, broken vow) and show citta-vilāsa (waves of thought) to sustain karuṇa convincingly.
Khanda Section: Sahitya-shastra (Rasa–Bhava–Alankara / Poetics and Aesthetics)
Primary Rasa: karuna
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A moral rupture leading to grief: a figure witnessing a dharma-violation (broken vow, injustice) and then sinking into sorrow, with swirling thought-forms indicating citta-vilāsa; a teacher points to the ‘sthāyin’ concept.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural: narrative of dharma being violated (a torn oath-scroll, fallen sacred thread, or unjust judgment), followed by a grieving figure with stylized tear motifs; subtle spiral patterns around the head to show citta-vilāsa; muted palette for karuṇa.","tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore: central sorrowful figure seated, hands on chest, tearful eyes; side vignette shows dharma-upaghāta (broken promise before a sacred fire); gold halo and ornate border contrast with somber expression.","mysore_prompt":"Mysore painting: didactic scene with a guru explaining sthāyibhāva; diagram-like inset: ‘dharma-upaghāta → śoka → sthāyin’; gentle shading, clear facial expressions of grief and contemplation.","mughal_miniature_prompt":"Mughal miniature: courtroom or palace scene of injustice leading to lament; the afflicted person in foreground, attendants consoling; delicate depiction of inner turmoil via cloud-like motifs near the head; subdued colors."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"contemplative","suggested_raga":"Todi","pace":"slow","voice_tone":"contemplative"}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: धर्मोपघातजश्चित्तविलासजनितस् = धर्मोपघातजः + चित्तविलासजनितः (अः + च → श्च); शोकाद्भवेत् = शोकात् + भवेत्
Related Themes: Agni Purana 341.11-341.13 (karuṇa/raudra causes and manifestations)
It imparts technical knowledge of Sanskrit poetics (Sāhitya-śāstra): how śoka (grief) is causally explained (from dharma-upaghāta and citta-vilāsa) and how such emotions relate to the concept of sthāyibhāva (enduring emotional state) in rasa theory.
Beyond ritual and theology, the Agni Purana functions as a compendium of disciplines; here it preserves a strand of classical aesthetic theory—definitions and causal analysis of emotions used in drama/poetry—showing its coverage of Sanskrit literary science alongside dharma and other vidyās.
By linking grief to dharma-upaghāta (harm to righteousness), it frames emotional suffering as ethically conditioned, encouraging dharmic conduct and mental discipline (citta-niyama) as supports for inner steadiness and purification.