Exploring Agency in the Mahabharata

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action
Aesthetics
Agency
agency and action in Mahabharata discourse
ahimsa
Akbar Razmnamah
Amita Chatterjee
ancient epics analysis
ancient Hindu philosophy
Arindam Chakrabarti
Arti Dhand
autonomy
B. N. Patnaik
BhagvadGita
BJP Candidate
Brahmin Dharma
Category=JBCC
Category=QDHC
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Chocolate Ice Cream
choice
Christopher G. Framarin
Clay Idol
cultures
Desireless Action
dharmic
Dice Game
duty
Early Vedic Age
Eating Chocolate Ice Cream
Ekalavya
Ekalavya's Thumb
Ekalavya’s Thumb
epic
Epic Text
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eq_society-politics
Ethics
female sexuality
freedom
Fundamental Ethical Questions
Gangeya Mukherji
gender
Hindu Ethics
history
Hysterica Passio
Incontinent Action
Indian philosophy
injustice
interdisciplinary ethics
Itihasa
justice
Karma
karma theory
Karmic Process
Karna
Kshatriya
Kuru Clan
Lakshmi Bandlamudi
learning
loyalty
Mahabharata
Manu
modern Western philosophy
moksa
moral agency
Moral Luck
Moral Semiotics
motivation
Narration
Odia Literature
Padshah
philosophy
Politics
promise keeping
rasa
Rasa Aesthetics
Retellings
samskaras
self-discovery
self-making
Sharma
Shirshendu Chakrabarti
societies
South Asian studies
Sudipta Kaviraj
Sundar Sarukkai
svabhava
svadharma
Tagore
Tagore's Poem
Tagore's Story
Tagore’s Poem
Tagore’s Story
Uma Chakravarti
Unwed Teenage Mother
Vana Parva
violence
Vrinda Dalmiya
Vyasa
Young Men
Yudhishthira

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138709201
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 20 Mar 2018
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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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.

Sibesh Chandra Bhattacharya is former Professor of Ancient History, Allahabad University, India.

Vrinda Dalmiya is Professor, Philosophy Department, University of Hawai’i, Manoa, USA.

Gangeya Mukherji is presently Visiting Professor, School of Arts and Sciences, Ahmedabad University, Ahmedabad, Gujarat, India.