Lalit Aesthetics and Dalit Aesthetics: A Comparative Study

Ghanshyam Kumar *

Abstract

This article critically examines the conceptual differences between Lalit (mainstream, Savarna) aesthetics and Dalit aesthetics in Indian literature. It argues that traditional Indian and Western aesthetic theories?rooted in imagination, ornamentation, and ?art for art?s sake??fail to represent the lived realities of marginalized communities. The study highlights Dalit literature as a product of self-experience, social realism, resistance, and protest, emphasizing suffering, revolt, and cry as core aesthetic elements. Drawing upon thinkers such as G. N. Devy, Sharan Kumar Limbale, Premchand, Rabindranath Tagore, and Ambedkarite ideology, the paper advocates the inclusion of new rasas??Revolt? and ?Cry??within the conventional rasa theory. It concludes that Dalit aesthetics foregrounds ?art for life?s sake,? balancing truth and beauty through social justice, realism, and humanitarian commitment.

Keywords

Lalit aesthetics Dalit aesthetics foggy verbalism revolt rasa cry rasa

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Journal Information

The Interiors

Volume 8, Issue 1

ISSN: 2319-4804

Published: January 2019

Citation

Kumar, G. (2026). "Lalit Aesthetics and Dalit Aesthetics: A Comparative Study". The Interiors, 8(1), pp. 49-56.

Corresponding Author

Ghanshyam Kumar

Guest Faculty, Department of English, G. D. College, Begusarai