ABSTRACT

The Sanskrit Mahabharata (which contains the Bhagavad Gita) is sorely neglected as a classic - perhaps the classic - of world literature, and is of particularly timely human importance in today's globalised and war-torn world. This book is a chronological survey of the Sanskrit Mahabharata's central royal patriline - a family tree that is also a list of kings. Brodbeck explores the importance and implications of patrilineal maintenance within the royal culture depicted by the text, and shows how patrilineal memory comes up against the fact that in every generation a wife must be involved, with the consequent danger that the children might not sustain the memorial tradition of their paternal family. The Mahabharata Patriline bridges a gap in text-critical methodology between the traditional philological approach and more recent trends in gender and literary theory. Studying the Mahabharata as an integral literary unit and as a story stretched over dozens of generations, this book casts particular light on the events of the more recent generations and suggests that the text's internal narrators are members of the family whose story they tell.

part |2 pages

Part One: A Royal Patrilineal Model

chapter 1|10 pages

Analogical Deceptions

chapter 2|8 pages

Wide Shots

chapter 3|10 pages

The Mahbhrata Patriline

chapter 4|10 pages

rddha in the Mahbhrata

chapter 5|30 pages

Marriage and the Heir

chapter 6|16 pages

The Royal Hunt

part |2 pages

Part Two: The Distant Ancestry

chapter 7|14 pages

Female Links

chapter 8|16 pages

Yayti

chapter 9|14 pages

The Paurava Stretch

chapter 11|6 pages

Savaraa

chapter 12|4 pages

Kuru

part |2 pages

Part Three: The Pavas and their Proximate Ancestry

chapter 13|14 pages

atanu and Bhma

chapter 14|12 pages

dhtarra and Pu

chapter 15|38 pages

The Pavas

part |4 pages

Part Four: Janamejaya and the Sarpasatra

chapter 16|12 pages

Parikit

chapter 17|26 pages

Janamejaya

chapter 18|8 pages

Conclusion