Raja Yudhisthira : Kingship in Epic Mahabharata

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Dublin Core

Title

Raja Yudhisthira : Kingship in Epic Mahabharata

Subject

Mahabharata; king; ruler; representation of kingship; Great Bharata song; kingship in the Mahabharata; poem; poetry; heroic religion; Indo-European myth

Description

In Raja Yudhisthira, Kevin McGrath brings his comprehensive literary, ethnographic, and analytical knowledge of the epic Mahabharata to bear on the representation of kingship in the poem. He shows how the preliterate Great Bharata song depicts both archaic and classical models of kingly and premonetary polity and how the king becomes a ruler who is viewed as ritually divine. Based on his precise and empirical close reading of the text, McGrath then addresses the idea of heroic religion in both antiquity and today; for bronze-age heroes still receive great devotional worship in modern India and communities continue to clash at the sites that have been—for millennia—associated with these epic figures; in fact, the word hero is in fact more of a religious than a martial term. One of the most important contributions of Raja Yudhisthira, and a subtext in McGrath's analysis of Yudhisthira's kingship, is the revelation that neither of the contesting moieties of the royal Hastinapura clan triumphs in the end, for it is the Yadava band of Krsna who achieve real victory. That is, it is the matriline and not the patriline that secures ultimate success: it is the kinship group of Krsna—the heroic figure who was to become the dominant Vaisnava icon of classical India—who benefits most from the terrible Bharata war.

Creator

McGrath, Kevin

Source

https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/96874

Publisher

Cornell University Press

Date

2017

Contributor

Prasetyo Adi Nugroho

Rights

https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/

Format

PDF

Language

English

Type

Textbooks

Identifier

ISBN
9781501704987

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