| Introduces Paramānand, one of         India's poet-saints, his work, and this work's use in         ritual.
 Singing Krishna introduces Paramānand, one of         north India's greatest medieval poet-saints, whose poetry has been sung         from the sixteenth century to the present in ritual service to the Hindu         deity Krishna. A. Whitney Sanford examines how hearing Paramānand's poetry         in ritual context serves as a threshold for devotees between this world         and Krishna's divine world. To "see Krishna" is a primary goal of the         devotee, and Paramānand deftly constructs a vision through words. Sanford         employs the dual strategies of interpreting Paramānand's poemswhich sing         the cycles of Krishna's activitiesand illustrating the importance of         their ritual contexts. This approach offers insight into the nature of the         devotional experience that is not accessible by simply studying the poetry         or rituals in isolation. Sanford shows that the significance of         Paramānand's poetry lies not only in its beauty and historical importance         but finally in its capacity to permit the devotee to see through the         ephemeral world into Krishna's world.
 
 "
Sanford's analysis of         Paramānand's work is certainly valuable and goes a long way toward         unpacking the intense devotional experience of bhakti and the         traditions of the Vallabha Sampraday."  Religion
 
 "The         beautiful lyrics of Paramānand's poetry are a welcome addition to the         growing body of Indic poetry in translation. Sanford's excellent book         guides us through the poetry and takes us right to its sources."          Constantina Rhodes Bailly, author of Shaiva Devotional Songs of         Kashmir: A Translation and Study of Utpaladeva's         Shivastotravali
 
 A. Whitney Sanford is Assistant Professor of         Religion at the University of         Florida.
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          | Table of Contents
 Acknowledgments
 
 Introduction
 
 A Critical         Perspective
 The Research Context
 The Experience of the         Temple
 Situated Poetry: Sound Becoming Sight
 Plan for the Book:         Following the Cycles
 
 1. Paramānand's Poetic World
 
 About         Paramānand's Poetry
 Paramānand's Poetic Environment
 Serving         Krishna
 Synaesthesia, Metaphor, and Transformation
 
 2. The End of         the Night: Poetry, Memory, and Culture
 
 Śayan: While Braj         Sleeps
 Paramānand's World
 Theater of Memory
 MangalāKrishna         Rises
 ŚrngārOrnamentation
 
 3. Krishna's Morning Games: Creating         Intimacy through Treachery
 
 GvālBoyhood Play
 The Gopī's         Complaints to Yaśodā
 Mixed Bhāvas
 Shattered Boundaries         and Spilled Milk: Metonymies of Love
 
 4. Afternoon: Experiencing the         Food of Love
 
 RājbhogA Lunchtime Tryst in the         Forest
 Mahātmya: Separation during the Afternoon Watch
 Public         and Private Līlā
 UtthāpanĀvanī: Krishna's Arrival in         Braj
 Exemplars of Bhāva: The Cows and the Gopīs
 Bhog         and SandhyāratīThe Connoisseur of Rasa
 Eats and Goes to         Bed
 
 5. Night: Playing the Game of Love
 
 Śayan         MānaDivine Jealousy
 The Sakhī's Counsel to Rādhā about Her         Sulking and Pride
 Setting the Stage: A Romantic Evening and the Beauty         of the Lovers
 The Sakhī's Warning
 The Sakhī's Message         to Krishna
 The Resolution of Māna
 Krishna's         Māna
 The Sakhī in Māna Poems
 
 6. Autumn to         Spring: Gopīs, Birds, and the Moon
 
 Śarad: The Autumn         Full Moon
 Hemant: Vows of the Cold Winter
 Vasant: Spring and         Holī
 
 7. SummerSeeing Reality: The Synaesthetic         Transformation
 
 Grīsma: The Hot Season
 Vars: The Rainy         Season
 Back to the Beginning
 
 Notes
 Works         Cited
 Index
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