ABSTRACT

The Mahabharata, one of the major epics of India, is a sourcebook complete by itself as well as an open text constantly under construction. This volume looks at transactions between its modern discourses and ancient vocabulary. Located amid conversations between these two conceptual worlds, the volume grapples with the epic’s problematisation of dharma or righteousness, and consequently, of the ideal person and the good life through a cluster of issues surrounding the concept of agency and action. Drawing on several interdisciplinary approaches, the essays reflect on a range of issues in the Mahabharata, including those of duty, motivation, freedom, selfhood, choice, autonomy, and justice, both in the context of philosophical debates and their ethical and political ramifications for contemporary times.

This book will be of interest to scholars and researchers engaged with philosophy, literature, religion, history, politics, culture, gender, South Asian studies, and Indology. It will also appeal to the general reader interested in South Asian epics and the Mahabharata.

chapter |27 pages

Introduction

To Do

part I|78 pages

Action

chapter 2|17 pages

In Search of Genuine Agency

A Review of Action, Freedom and Karma in the Mahābhārata

chapter 4|26 pages

Karmayoga and the Vexed Moral Agent

part II|88 pages

Actor

chapter 5|20 pages

Complexities in the Agency for Violence

A Look at the Mahābhārata

chapter 6|14 pages

Irresolution and Agency

The Case of Yudhiṣṭhira

chapter 7|19 pages

Can the Subhuman Speak or Act?

Agency of Sagacious Serpents, Benevolent Birds, Rational Rodents, and a Mocking Mongoose in the Mahābhārata

chapter 8|17 pages

Textual–Sexual Transitions

The Reification of Women in the Mahābhārata

part III|52 pages

Epic Agency and Retellings

chapter 11|18 pages

Answerability Between Lived Life and Living Text

Chronotopicity in Finding Agency in the Mahābhārata