Death, Defilement, and the Sacred: Navigating the Pollution–Purity Dichotomy in Ancient Indian Funerary Rites

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.63931/ijchr.v7i1.102

Keywords:

Aśaucam, Death, Hinduism, Ritual Purity, Varṇa

Abstract

This article looks at ritual purity, pollution, death, and varna within Hinduism, especially regarding how these ideas were codified, contested, and ritualized within normative Sanskrit texts. This research portrays death as both a physical event and a metaphysical transition that creates a fundamental crisis for ritual and sociocultural order. The secondary scholarly sources of Dharmaśāstra literature, Gṛhyasūtras, and Purāṇas capture a complex set of rules regulating impurity (aśaucam) and mourning and post-funerary observances related to death. Importantly, death creates not just bodily and spatial pollution but pollution so substantial that custom dictates it warrants long, complex rites of re-integration so the individual or family can start to rejoin a normative social and cosmic order. This study further brackens how impurity, normatively related to death, is differentially regulated based on one's varna (social category) and gender and links the deeply relational and embedded hierarchies in ritual ideals. The intent here was to begin to show, through tightly engaged textual reading and secondary scholarship, that it was important to see the regulation of death and its impurities as more than a religious phenomenon. Death and the realities of its impurities were more than a religious practice; they were a mechanism for establishing and enforcing social boundaries and the structured delineation of principles outlined in varna-based categorizations. By situating death within the discourse of purity and pollution, the paper contributes to understanding how ritual and social hierarchies were constructed and sustained in early Indian society.

Author Biography

Ratnpriya, Woxsen University, India

Ratnpriya is a graduate of Miranda House, University of Delhi, and a researcher specializing in the history of ancient India. Her academic interests encompass gender relations, social history, and cultural history, with a particular focus on early historic India as represented in Sanskrit literature. She also specializes in death studies, examining the social dimensions of death and death rituals, alongside her work in sexuality studies, exploring power, identity, and cultural expression within historical contexts.

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Published

2025-06-16

How to Cite

Ratnpriya. (2025). Death, Defilement, and the Sacred: Navigating the Pollution–Purity Dichotomy in Ancient Indian Funerary Rites. International Journal on Culture, History, and Religion, 7(1), 112–123. https://doi.org/10.63931/ijchr.v7i1.102

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