The iconic Rukmini Devi, a convent-educated Brahmin whose father was a member of the elite Theosophical Society of India, is near-synonymous with the 바카라invention바카라 of Bharatanatyam. On watching her friend, the renowned Russian ballerina Anna Pavlova, perform Dying Swan, Rukmini Devi was inspired to learn dance, and the call to roots soon touched her, coloured by a strong leaning towards bhakti. That바카라s the point at which Sadir nac was transformed. Ananya Chatterjea writes about the symbolic 바카라weight바카라 of the nomenclature: 바카라Supposedly it reflects the amalgamation of bhava, raga and tala, bha-ra-ta, at the confluence of which dance is located. However, its simultaneous바카라claiming of affiliation to Bharata, the author of Natyashastra, suggesting its adherence to the standards of 바카라classicism바카라 outlined in that scripture, as well as to Bharat, one of the indigenous names for India, implying its status as the national dance form of India, are hard to miss.바카라 Under the guidance of her friend (and theosophist) Annie Besant, Rukmini Devi deterged the dances of their toxic association with prostitution, by 바카라shifting the foundational emotion from sringara, the erotic mood, to bhakti, the devotional mood,바카라 Chatterjea writes. This turn was institutionalised through the establishment of Rukmini Devi바카라s Kalakshetra College of Dance and Music in 1936, where the new, spiritually exalted form of Bharatanatyam, born from the ashes of Sadir, was propagated. A large-scale sanitisation and Sanskritisation of India바카라s dances were witnessed across the board. A systematic suppression of the physicality that had seeped in from the Mahari repertoire바카라with the scope of movement of the hips restrained바카라defined Odissi.