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Most important sex manual in mediaeval India
In the words of one jacket blurb: the "Koka Shastra" (Trans. A. Comfort, Allen
& Unwin, 1964) and its
associated texts are to mediaeval literature what the "Kama Sutra" was to ancient.
When Kokkoka turned in the
twelfth century to the themes of love and sex the move was audacious: for a thousand years
the "Kama Sutra"
representing the summed wisdom of earlier times, had been supreme. What more was there to
say? Mediaeval
India was different to the India of Vatsyayana. "A new approach was needed yet the early
pages suggest that we
are reading a new abridgement of the classic work, a sibling rather than a sequel." And
Kokkoka frequently
expresses his debt to the earlier master. The abiding value of the Sanskrit texts, as of many
other ancient works,
is the positive attitude to human sexuality.