Bhagavad Gita: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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{{work}}
{{work}}
{{Infobox book
| title = Bhagavad Gita
| original title = भगवद्गीता
| image = Krishna tells Gita to Arjuna.jpg
| caption = Lord Sri Krishna preaching Gita to Arjuna at the battle of Kurukshetra
| author =
| central theme =
| elevator pitch =
| genre =
| franchise = Mahabharata
| publication date = 2nd century BCE
| source page exists =
}}
{{quote|''I have become Death, [[Atomic Hate|the destroyer of Worlds]]''
{{quote|''I have become Death, [[Atomic Hate|the destroyer of Worlds]]''
|Oppenheimer, [[Beam Me Up, Scotty|(mis)quoting the Gita.]]}}
|Oppenheimer, [[Beam Me Up, Scotty|(mis)quoting the Gita.]]}}
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{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}
[[Category:Classic Literature]]
[[Category:Literature of the 2nd century BCE]]
[[Category:Oral Tradition]]
[[Category:Hindu Mythology]]
[[Category:Bhagavad Gita]]
[[Category:Bhagavad Gita]]
[[Category:Literature]]
[[Category:Literature]]
[[Category:Sanskrit Literature]]
[[Category:Sanskrit Literature]]
[[Category:Religious Works]]

Latest revision as of 13:43, 19 February 2022

Bhagavad Gita
File:Krishna tells Gita to Arjuna.jpg
Lord Sri Krishna preaching Gita to Arjuna at the battle of Kurukshetra
Original Title: भगवद्गीता
Central Theme:
Synopsis:
Series: Mahabharata
First published: 2nd century BCE
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I have become Death, the destroyer of Worlds

—Oppenheimer, (mis)quoting the Gita.

The Bhagavad Gita (The Song of God) is a book within a larger epic based on the conversation in the Hindu Epic Mahabharata between Warrior Prince Arjuna and his charioteer Krishna during the Kurushetra War. Arjuna had to fight his cousin Evil Prince Big Bad Duryodhana, his archnemesis Karna, his teacher and mentor Drona and Kuru Patriach and beloved grandfather Bhishma after exhausting all other legal means in order to get back his Kingdom. Arjuna gets a Hamlet moment and is unresolved on whether to take part in the battle and in consequence, kill his kinsmen and teachers on the other side of the war. Krishna talks him into fighting in the war and along the way, talks about subtle philosophy regarding the nature of the soul, the doctrines of yoga, the nature of man and the way to love God. The conversation ends as he shows his real form as God to Arjuna and convinces Arjuna to trust his judgement.

Like the Mahabharata, it is a narrative poem written in Sanskrit and is one of the major books in Hindu Mythology. Because of its complex subject matter, it is subject to countless interpretations.

Tropes used in Bhagavad Gita include: