A hundred grains of rice: regional Mahābhārata stories in performance

This article explores the subject of regional folk stories found in various vernacular expressions of the Mahābhārata. In particular, the non-canonical stories of Śaśirekha and Śakuni as found in several Telugu versions of the Mahābhārata story are taken up as exemplars to investigate the dynamic pr...

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Main Author: Srinivas Reddy
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Edinburgh Library 2017-05-01
Series:The South Asianist
Online Access:http://www.southasianist.ed.ac.uk/article/view/1820
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spelling doaj-429280af11cc44dbba469ec46345a3e52021-09-13T09:04:33ZengUniversity of Edinburgh LibraryThe South Asianist2050-487X2017-05-01511820A hundred grains of rice: regional Mahābhārata stories in performanceSrinivas Reddy0IIT GandhinagarThis article explores the subject of regional folk stories found in various vernacular expressions of the Mahābhārata. In particular, the non-canonical stories of Śaśirekha and Śakuni as found in several Telugu versions of the Mahābhārata story are taken up as exemplars to investigate the dynamic process by which regional folk stories transitioned from theatre to text, and from text to cinema. The Śaśirekha story for example, moves from Surabhi folk theatre to a multitude of parinaya texts and finally to the Telugu cinematic hit Maya Bazaar of 1957. By tracking these stories as they evolved into various forms of new media, this article elucidates the fluid, circulatory process by which folk elements enter a grand narrative like the Mahābhārata, penetrate the normative text and get recirculated back as new literary forms and performative genres. In this context, I also try to complicate the classical/folk dichotomy and question the permeability and mutually constitutive nature of such hermeneutical categories.http://www.southasianist.ed.ac.uk/article/view/1820
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Srinivas Reddy
spellingShingle Srinivas Reddy
A hundred grains of rice: regional Mahābhārata stories in performance
The South Asianist
author_facet Srinivas Reddy
author_sort Srinivas Reddy
title A hundred grains of rice: regional Mahābhārata stories in performance
title_short A hundred grains of rice: regional Mahābhārata stories in performance
title_full A hundred grains of rice: regional Mahābhārata stories in performance
title_fullStr A hundred grains of rice: regional Mahābhārata stories in performance
title_full_unstemmed A hundred grains of rice: regional Mahābhārata stories in performance
title_sort hundred grains of rice: regional mahābhārata stories in performance
publisher University of Edinburgh Library
series The South Asianist
issn 2050-487X
publishDate 2017-05-01
description This article explores the subject of regional folk stories found in various vernacular expressions of the Mahābhārata. In particular, the non-canonical stories of Śaśirekha and Śakuni as found in several Telugu versions of the Mahābhārata story are taken up as exemplars to investigate the dynamic process by which regional folk stories transitioned from theatre to text, and from text to cinema. The Śaśirekha story for example, moves from Surabhi folk theatre to a multitude of parinaya texts and finally to the Telugu cinematic hit Maya Bazaar of 1957. By tracking these stories as they evolved into various forms of new media, this article elucidates the fluid, circulatory process by which folk elements enter a grand narrative like the Mahābhārata, penetrate the normative text and get recirculated back as new literary forms and performative genres. In this context, I also try to complicate the classical/folk dichotomy and question the permeability and mutually constitutive nature of such hermeneutical categories.
url http://www.southasianist.ed.ac.uk/article/view/1820
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