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Title: Towards an Architecture of the Mahabharata


1
Towards an Architecture of the Mahabharata
  • Vishwa Adluri
  • Hunter College, CUNY
  • vadluri_at_hunter.cuny.edu
  • WWW.Presocratics.Org
  • Paper presented at the International Seminar on
  • The Mahabharata Its Historicity, Antiquity,
    Evolution Impact on Civilization
  • Organized by the Draupadi Trust, Delhi, April 2012

2
  • Notre seule source, ce sont les manuscrits
    eux-mêmes, donc, en dernière analyse, les stemma.
    Nous navons donc pas le droit de répudier leur
    témoignage sous le prétexte quil nous paraît
    absurde.
  • R. Marichal, La critique des textes
  • Our only source are the manuscripts themselves,
    then, in the final analysis, these stemma. We
    therefore do not have the right to repudiate
    their evidence under the pretext that it appears
    absurd to us.

3
A. The Mahabharata Archetype
4
A. The Mahabharata Archetype (contd.)
Slide 1 Textual tree of Adiparvan versions,
illustrating the stemmatic relationships
Source Sukthankar 1933
5
A. The Mahabharata Archetype (contd.)
Slide 2 Illustrating the distinction between the
space of meaningful discourse (sense and
reference, and sense) and nonsense (neither sense
nor reference)
6
A. The Mahabharata Archetype (contd.)
Slide 3 Unrooted phylogenetic tree illustrating
the separation of the Mahabharata tradition into
three broad groups Southern, Northern, Kasmiri,
and the position of the CE vis-à-vis these three
(source Phillips-Rodriguez, Howe, and Windram
2009)
7
A. The Mahabharata Archetype (contd.)
  • Vishwa Adluri Joydeep Bagchee, eds., Reading
    the Fifth Veda Studies on the Mahabharata,
    Essays by Alf Hiltebeitel, vol. 1 (Leiden E.J.
    Brill, 2011)
  • When the Goddess was a Woman Mahabharata
    Ethnographies, Essays by Alf Hiltebeitel, vol. 2
    (Leiden E.J. Brill, 2011)

8
A. The Mahabharata Archetype (contd.)
  • Vishwa Adluri, ed., The Critical Edition and its
    Critics A Retrospective of Mahabharata
    Scholarship, Special issue of the Journal of
    Vaishnava Studies 19,2 (Spring 2011).

9
A. The Mahabharata Archetype (contd.)
  • Vishwa Adluri Joydeep Bagchee, The Nay Science
    A History of German Indology (Oxford Oxford
    University Press).
  • Vishwa Adluri Joydeep Bagchee, Philology and
    Criticism A Guide to Mahabharata Textual
    Criticism (forthcoming).

10
A. The Mahabharata Archetype (contd.)
Slide 4 Illustrating the distinction between
witness texts, source texts, and archetype
11
B. From Archetype to Architecture
12
B. From Archetype to Architecture (contd.)
Slide 5 Structure and divisions of the
constituted text
13
B. From Archetype to Architecture (contd.)
Slide 6 Division of the Mahabharata into 3
triads of 6 chapters each
14
B. From Archetype to Architecture (contd.)
Slide 7 The return to the Sauti-Saunaka frame in
the Naraya?iya
15
B. From Archetype to Architecture (contd.)
Slide 8 The circular narrative architecture of
the epic, illustrating the exit from the text of
niv?tti and the continuation on into prav?tti
16
B. From Archetype to Architecture (contd.)
Slide 9 Organization of prav?tti into four
Gestalts or Genera, each with its respective
remainder, form of immortality, and defect
17
C. Expansion versus Architecture
18
C. Expansion versus Architecture (contd.)
Slide 10 A fanciful interpretation of the epics
genesis (source Gupta and Ramachandran 2007)
19
C. Expansion versus Architecture (contd.)
Slide 11 Comparing interpreters different
attitudes toward the epic Part 1 K?atriya Epic
versus Brahmanic Revision
20
C. Expansion versus Architecture (contd.)
Slide 12 Comparing interpreters different
attitudes toward the epic Part 2 Addition versus
Loss
21
C. Expansion versus Architecture (contd.)
Slide 13 Comparing interpreters different
attitudes toward the epic Part 3 Versions versus
Levels
22
C. Expansion versus Architecture (contd.)
Slide 14 Comparing interpreters different
attitudes toward the epic Part 3 Versions versus
Levels
23
C. Expansion versus Architecture (contd.)
Slide 15 Vyasas narrations of the Mahabharata,
showing how Saunaka in the Astikaparvan forges
together the Astika narrative with Vaisa?payanas
narration
24
  • 1. The thesis of different versions of the epic
    is
  • A creation of 19th century (German) Orientalism.
  • Part of a search for heroic Aryan origins.
  • Projection of German fantasies of a militaristic
    masculine culture onto the ancient epic.
  • Part of a program of vilification of indigenous
    intellectual traditions (as Brahmanism or
    Hinduism).

Slide 16a Summary of the results of our
investigation thus far
25
  • 2. The thesis of different versions of the epic
  • Lacks all support in the epic itself.
  • Ignores the fact that a text can have different
    levels of meaning.
  • Ignores the epics explicit claim to being the
    thought entire (mata? k?tsna?) of Vyasa.
  • Makes no distinction between what can be shown
    historically-archaeologically (e.g., settlements
    or Painted Grey Ware, etc.) and what cannot be
    shown historically-archaeologically (i.e., is
    only a textual point).

Slide 16b Summary of the results of our
investigation thus far
26
  • 3. This is a literary, poetical, and aesthetic
    claim
  • It should not be caricatured to mean that there
    was a historical Vyasa and that we mean that this
    personage wrote the entire thing.
  • It does not rule out historical or archaelogical
    investigations, but shows that we must exercise
    caution regarding what such investigations can
    show.
  • Specifically, we must be cautious against the
    attempt to take the text hostage for a pugnacious
    political ideology such as Aryan theory or
    Indo-European theory.

Slide 16c Summary of the results of our
investigation thus far
27
Slide 17 Motif of ascent and descent The Vasu
narratives in the Adiparvan and Naraya?iya
28
  1. The story of liberation. Garu?a is born into
    servitude, along with his mother Vinata. The very
    reason given for his birth is to liberate Vinata.
    In doing so, he also shatters the wheel of pain
    that separates mortals from the pot of
    immortality.
  2. Liberation occurs through the structural motif of
    an ascent. This ascent begins on a mountain.
  3. The liberation includes two segments one to
    Indras heaven to steal am?ta, and another to a
    height beyond Vi??u. Let us call these two
    ascents the Indra segment and Vi??u segment
    respectively.
  4. These two ascents are related to each other as a
    series, not as parallel alternatives.
  5. A tree and a flag-pole are closely associated
    with these two ascents.
  6. The tree turns out to be an unsteady support, and
    Garu?a is forced to discard it. Vi??us
    flag-pole, in turn, is achieved through
    equanimity (Garu?as even-keeled flight) which
    impresses Vi??u.
  7. The Vi??u segment is achieved by explicitly
    forsaking the Indra segment. Garu?a explicitly
    asks for immortality without the aid of am?ta. No
    one is saved by it in this narrative.
  8. The Indra segment is antagonistic to ??is who
    practice tapas. Indra mocks them but they best
    him by creating Garu?a. The antagonism reveals a
    deep divide, the one of prav?tti and niv?tti.
  9. Indras sovereignty is one of prav?tti, powered
    by sacrifice and vulnerable to fall. Such a
    sacrifice is the prav?tti-powering sacrifice.
  10. Garu?as attainment to a region above Vi??u is a
    different kind of achievement. It is one of
    niv?tti.
  11. In order to proceed on the path of niv?tti,
    Garu?a must overcome the four genera of becoming
    sacrifice, cosmology, genealogy and war.
  12. Garu?a represents a different kind of sacrifice,
    a non-Agni i.e., a non-prav?tti sacrifice. Let us
    call it niv?tti-conducive sacrifice.
  13. The Indra segment also prominently features a
    friendship Indra seeks out Garu?as friendship.
  14. The Vi??u segment leaves the Indra segment
    intact. Indra is not unseated, his claim to the
    immortality of am?ta is challenged but not
    toppled.

Slide 18 Summary of Garu?as ascent
29
  • All this is rooted in Time, to be or not to be,
    to be happy or not to be happy. Time ripens the
    creatures. Time rots them. And Time again puts
    out the Time that burns down the creatures. Time
    shrinks them and expands them again. Time walks
    in all creatures, unaverted, impartial. Whatever
    beings
  • there were in the past will be in the future,
    whatever are busy now, they are all the creatures
    of Timeknow it and do not lose your sense.
  • Mahabharata 1.1.187-190.
  • In this book, K???a Dvaipayana has uttered a holy
    Upani?ad. And K???a Vasudeva is glorified here,
    the self-eternal Blessed Lordfor He is the truth
    and the right and the pure and the holy. He is
    the eternal Brahmanthe supreme Surety, the
    Everlasting light of whose divine exploits the
    wise tell tales.
  • From Him begins existence that is not yet, and
    the non-existent that becomes. His is the
    continuity and the activity. His is birth, death
    and rebirth.
  • Mahabharata 1.1.191, 193-195.

Slide 19 Time and Eternity as the basic concerns
of the epic
30
Towards an Architecture of the Mahabharata
  • Vishwa Adluri
  • Hunter College, CUNY
  • vadluri_at_hunter.cuny.edu
  • WWW.Presocratics.Org
  • Paper presented at the International Seminar on
  • The Mahabharata Its Historicity, Antiquity,
    Evolution Impact on Civilization
  • Organized by the Draupadi Trust, Delhi, April 2012
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