ABSTRACT

The Mahabharata is at once an archive and a living text, a sourcebook complete by itself and an open text perennially under construction. Driving home this striking contemporary relevance of the famous Indian epic, Mahabharata Now focuses on the issues of narration, aesthetics and ethics, as also their interlinkages. The cross-disciplinary essays in the volume imaginatively re-interpret the ‘timeless’ classic in the light of the pre-modern Indian narrative styles, poetics, aesthetic codes, and moral puzzles; the Western theories on modern ethics, aesthetics, metaphysics, psychoanalysis, and philosophy of science; and the contemporary social, ethical and political concerns. The essays are all united in their effort to situate the Mahabharata in the context of here and now without violating the sanctity of the ‘written text’ as we have it today. The book will be of interest to scholars and students of Indian and comparative philosophy, Indian and comparative literature, cultural studies, and history.

part |81 pages

Narration

chapter |26 pages

Of Gambling

A Few Lessons from the Mahābhārata

chapter |20 pages

Significance of the Early Parvans

Modes of Narration, Birth Stories and Seeds of Conflict

chapter |25 pages

Understanding Yudhiṣṭhira's Actions

Recasting Karma-Yoga in a Wittgensteinian Mould

part |29 pages

Aesthetics

part |171 pages

Ethics

chapter |17 pages

Care Ethics and Epistemic Justice

Some Insights from the Mahābhārata 1

chapter |21 pages

Who Speaks for Whom?

The Queen, the Dāsī and Sexual Politics in the Sabhāparvan

chapter |16 pages

Of Sleep and Violence

Reading the Sauptikaparvan in Times of Terror

chapter |25 pages

Hiṃsā–Ahiṃsā in the Mahābhārata

The Lonely Position of Yudhiṣṭhira

chapter |40 pages

Just Words

An Ethics of Conversation in the Mahābhārata