Rasa (aesthetic emotion) as a framework for understanding how collective grief is expressed and experienced through art, ritual, and shared meaning-making.
Rasa tattva—the theory of aesthetic emotions in classical Indian aesthetics—offers a language for how collective grief achieves expression and catharsis. Mirabai's songs are vehicles of rasa; they transmute raw emotion into art that communicates across time and space. In collective mourning, we create rasa through ritual, music, poetry, visual art, and gathered presence. These forms allow the community to feel together in ways that direct speech cannot. The examined heart recognizes that mourning rituals—whether funerals, vigils, memorials, or public ceremonies—are not separate from grieving but essential expressions of it. Rasa tattva suggests that aesthetic beauty is not frivolous in grief but integral; beauty honors the dead and transforms suffering into meaning. When communities create art in response to tragedy—songs, sculptures, films, written testimonies—they are practicing rasa tattva. This framework validates the human need to ritualize loss, to give it form and feeling through beauty. The examined heart understands that how we mourn—the care we take in our expressions—is as important as that we mourn.
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