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Bell & Howell IntOnnation and Luming 300 North Zaeb Road. Ann Arbor. MI 48106-1346 USA
UMf 800-521..Q600
Ancillary Stories in the Sanskrit Mah8bh8rata
Barbara Gombach
Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences
COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY
2000
UMI Number: 9956353
Copyright 2000 by Gombach, Barbara Claire All rights reserved.
UMf UUI Uicrofonn 9958353 Copyright 2000 by Bell & Howell Information and Leaming Company. All rights reserved. This microform edition is protected against unauthorized copying under Title 17. United States Code.
Bell & Howell Infonnation and Learning Company 300 North Zeeb Road P.O. Box 1348 Ann Arbor. MI48106-1346
C2000
Barbara Claire Gombach All Rights Reserved
ABSTRACT Ancillary Stories in the Sanskrit Mah.bh.rata Barbara Gombach The MahabhSrata was compiled in North India during a time of lively
debate
in
brahmanica1
boundaries of canon
(§ruti)
intellectual
in Hindu
circles
about
the
religious traditions.
The
indigenous tradition recognizes the epic as history (jtih8sa) and as
authoritative
religious
knowledge
discourse produced by humans.
two
(sm~tj)J
forms
of
This dissertation argues that the
Mahabharata became religiously authoritative chiefly through the 1 abors
of
brahman
i nte1l ectua1 s
who
were
responsi b1 e
an
The primary
editorial process scholars do not understand well. intent of that process, however,
for
becomes evident when we isolate
for study the remarkable body of story material that constitutes nearly half of the epic. In examining the ancillary stories, I show that they serve the rhetori ca 1
functi on of
maki ng
the epi c
p resented as authori tat i ve i nformat ion, interprets the Pandava-Kaurava war. namely the
resultant epic,
authoritative
(sm~tj).
a
anci 11 ary
part i cu 1 ar
is
into
smrtj.
They
as sacred history,
The i nterpretati on
then declared to
be
are that
i tse1 f,
religiously
Whether or not the characters or themes of story were
in
fact anci ent,
compi 1 ers consi stent1 y presented them that way.
the
epi CiS
Based on thi s
prominent feature of the epicls ancillary stories. I conclude that it was a vehicle by which brahman intellectuals gained legitimacy for new practices such as bhakti, pilgrimage. and ahj'!'saby arguing that they are fully congruent with §ruti. if properly understood.
CONTENTS I.
History of Scholarship on Ancillary Stories in the Sanskrit Mah~bh8rata A.
1
Introduction 1. Chapter Overview and Framework of the Study 2. Narrative Context of the Ancillary Tales 3. Survey of the Ancillary Tales in the
1 1 12 23
Mah8bh~rata
B.
Major Trends in Western Scholarship on Ancillary Tales in the Mahabharata 30
c.
The Mah8bh.rata as a Coherent Whole: Review of Research 1. Ancillary Tales in the Indian Intellectual Tradition in Sanskrit 2. Western Interpretations of the Mahabh8rata as a Coherent Whole a. Antecedents of Current Approaches b. Western Scholarship Since World War II 3. Research on Forms and Processes of Oral Transmission of the Mahabh~rata
60
Review of the Literature on Ancillary Tales in the Sanskrit Mahabh~rata
68
Focus of the Study
83
D. E.
II. Ancillary Stories. the Indian Intellectual Tradition, and Strategies for Vedacization
40 40 44 44 51
104
A.
Introduction
104
B.
Story Types and the Indian Intellectual Tradition 1. The Mah.bharata's Terms for Stories 2. Story Terms in Vedic Literature 3. itihasa and Interpretive Methods 4. Story Types and the Indian Intellectual Tradition
109 109 113 122
c.
123
Story to smrti: Strategies for Vedacization 136 1. Views the Relationship Between ~ruti and smrti 139 2. Eight Strategies of Vedacization 141
on
i
D.
The Mah.bh6rata in Sansk~it 1. Toward a Cultural Histo~y o~ Classical Sansk~it: Implications ~or Studying the Mah.bh.rata 2. Using the C~itical Edition o~ the Mah.bh.rata a. The Critical Edition. the Histo~y o~ Religions, and Resea~ch on Ancillary Narratives b. Manuscript Biases
159
E.
Conventions Adopted
162
F.
Limits
o~
~or
the Study
the Study
B.
C. D. E. F•
G. H.
I .
J.
K. L.
M. N.
o. P.
Rationale ~or Selection adi parvan sabh.parvan .ranyakaparvan vi r.taparvan udyogaparvan bhi smaparvan dronaparvan karnaparvan §a 7yaparvan sauptikaparvan striparvan §6ntjparvan and anu§8sanaparvan .§vamedhikaparvan 6§ramav.sjkaparvan mausa7aparvan. mah6prasth.njkaparvan. and svarg8roha~aparvan
IV. $.ntiparvan Story Cluster on Nonviolence
V.
146
152 152
163
III. Major Themes of the Mah.bh.rata's Ancillary Stories A.
146
167 167
170 185
193 203 204 213 216 219 221 223 224 224 230 240 241 243
A.
Rationale for Selection
243
B.
Preview of Themes ;n the ahims. Cluster
246
c.
The ahims6 Stories in Detail
274
343
Conclusion
Bibliography
353
;;
Appendix: A.
Synopses of Ancillary Stories in Their Mahabh~rata Context Synopses 1• ~di parvan 2• sabh.parvan 3•
~ranyakaparvan
4.
virataparvan udyogaparvan bh:I smaparvan dronaparvan karnaparvan §a 7yaparvan sauptikaparvan striparvan §antiparvan anu§asanaparvan a§vamedhi kaparvan a§ramavasikaparvan mausa7aparvan mahaprasthanikaparvan
5. 6. 7. 8.
9• 10. 11 •
12. 13. 14.
15. 16. 17. 18.
svar9aroha~aparvan
;; ;
1
2 2
58 69 142 144 168
174 182 191
213 217 220 351
437 459 463 464 465
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
This
study
was conceived
in
discussion w i t h
Barbara
S t o l e r M i 1 l e r , and i t b e n e f i t t e d g r e a t l y from h e r scholarship. Her own f a s c i n a t i o n w i t h t h e Mahabharata and her
personal
encouragement i n s p i r e d me t o p e r s i s t i n e x p l o r i n g t h e e p i c ' s thicket o f stories.
She brought S a n s k r i t a1 i v e f o r me, and
her keen a t t e n t i v e n e s s t o i t s s u b t l e t i e s i n s p i r e s me s t i 11
I
gratefully
commi t t e e . chapter
Prof.
thank John
the
members
Stratton
inval uabl e
and provided
of
my
dissertation
Hawley
s c r u t i n i zed
each
e d i t o r i a1
comments.
H is
questions always challenged me t o sharpen m y t h i n k i n g , o f t e n s t i m u l a t e d others t h a t opened new avenues o f study.
and
I
am p r i v i 1eged t o have worked w i t h him and t o have b e n e f i t t e d
from
his
intellectual
acuity,
his
sensitivity
to
lived
and h i s magnanimous nature.
re1 ig i ous t r a d i t i o n s ,
P r o f . Gary Tubb shared h i s v a s t know1edge o f t h e Sanskrit 1it e r a r y
tradition,
and
helped focus
my c o n s i d e r a t i o n
in d i genous in t e l l e c t u a l t r a d i t i o n s in ancient South Asi a.
of H is
comments and q u e s t i ons on an e a r l ie r d r a f t o f t h e d i s s e r t a t i o n were
critical
in
my
efforts
to
finalize
the
work,
and
c o n t r i b u t e d g r e a t l y t o helping me shape a program o f f u t u r e research. P r o f . Mary McGeet s groundi ng i n ancient S a n s k r i t t e x t s and contemporary
H i ndu r i t u a l
practice
brought
a
dimension to m y consideration o f t h e Mahabharata*
speci a1 Her own
broad
scho1 arl y
interests
and
her
ski 11
in
aski ng
fresh
questions of India's ancient texts set an enviable exa.ple for any scholar who works with documentary history. Prof. Rachel Fell MeDer.ott's observations about topics not discussed
in
the
dissertation
also
stimulated
me
to
articulate .ore clearly what I regard as the .ost fundamental question my analysis raises:
What role has the
Mah.bh.ra~a
played in intellectual debates about the relationship between §ru1:i and smr'tj. and what more can we 1 earn about the worki ngs
of canon formation in Hindu traditions? Prof. Ryuichi Abe's questions about .y work provoked new questions about
its possible broader significance
for
the
study of South Asian epic traditions. FinallYJ I thank .y family and friends for their support and encouragement.
Richard Weinstein, my husband. has been a
comrade in these 1 abors.
He has always been wi 11 i ng ei ther to
talk through my ideas about the epic and its universe. or to occupy
himself
dissertation.
otherwise His
while
constant
I
wrote
support,
and his
edited
the
intellectual
curiosity, and his unfailing good cheer have sustained me.
v
1
CHAPTER 1 HISTORY OF SCHOLARSHIP ON ANCILLARY STORIES IN THE SANSKRIT MAH~BH~RATA A.
Introduction Chapter Overview and Framework of the Study
1.
In
seventh
described
the
Sarasvati.
century epic
the
he
north knew
goddess
of
Indi a. as
an
the poet auspicious
learning. 1
The
eanabhatta shower
of
images
of
plenitude. sacrality, and shared wisdom this metaphor evokes encapsul ate qual; ti es that the Mah8bh8rata acqui red as the fabric of its war story was interwoven with hundreds of other stories.
Those other
stories,
which I collectively
ancillary stories, are the subject of this dissertation.
label As
I will show in subsequent chapters. the ancillary tales in the Mahabhara1:a
diverse.
(hereafter
Despite all
abbrevi ated
as
their variety.
Mbh)
are
extremely
the epic consistently
presents them as information from or about the past. as viewed from
the
vantage
poi nt of the
great
war.
Through
thei r
topics, characters. locations, and through explicit narrative statements about them. time and again the ancillary stories describe. explain. or elaborate upon the circumstances of the Bh3rata war by reference to an
1cakre
punyam
as
sarasvatya
i magi ned sacred
yo
varsam
iva
t radi t ion.
bharatam.
Harsacari-ta 1.3·, cited by Ram Karan Sharma. Elemen1:s of Poetry in 1:he Mahabh8ra1:a. Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass. 1966.
reprinted with the addition of an index. 1988. 5.
2
t h a t these n a r r a t i v e elements are a p r i n c i p a l means by which t h e Mbh became a r e l i g i o u s l y a u t h o r i t a t i v e work (smrti).
The
anti 11a r y s t o r i e s are n o t t h e o n l y way t h e epic accomplishes
t h i s task,
b u t they a r e an extremely important one.
s e c t i o n E o f t h i s chapter f o r a b r i e f
(See
discussion o f o t h e r
methods used t o make t h e e p i c s m r ti. ) The e p i c uses eleven d i f f e r e n t words t o r e f e r t o i t s s t o r i es, t h e terms ftfhasa and samvada b e i ng t h e most common. Often t h e y a r e narrated d i r e c t l y t o one o f t h e c h a r a c t e r s i n v o l v e d i n i t s c e n t r a l drama o-F f r a t r i c i d a l war. specific, epic's
To
be
anci 1 l a r y s t o r i e s a r e n a r r a t i v e s from o r about t h e
imagined past whose t e l l i n g
i s prompted by
surrounding t h e Pandava-Kaurava war. ' *
events
They range from p i t h y
proverbs t o lengthy s t o r i e s about former kings, from t a l e s o f dei t i es t o r e p o r t e d l y verbatim conversati ons o f venerable r, s is *
o f another age,
from cautionary animal f a b l e s t o q u o t a t i o n s
from o t h e r smrtis. vast m a j o r i t y o f
But s h o r t o r long, simple o r e s o t e r i c , t h e ancillary stories
a r e t o l d t o teach
the
meaning o f a t e r r i b l e war. The Mbh g i v e s us no equivalent f o r t h e phrase a n c i l l a r y story.
I have adopted i t f o r several reasons.
(1)
I n one
respect, t h i s d i s s e r t a t i o n s p r i ngs from t h e observation t h a t t h e Mbh i n t e n t i o n a l l y preserved a vocabulary o f s t o r y terms that
seemed o l d .
Although
i t may
well
be impossible t o
r e c o n s t r u c t more than a sketchy h i s t o r y o f each term (as my discussion
in
Chapter
2
w i 11 show),
the
vocabulary
was
3
nevertheless
widely
current,
believed to pre-date the epic.
usually
in
Vedic
literature
We are meant to associate the
appellations and the general contents of these stories, I will argue,
wi th the anci ent,
Vedism.
I do not mean to imply that one could in theory trace
each of the Mbh's itih.sas, a
text
enduri ng and sacred tradi ti on of
in
the
Vedic
sa~v.das • •khy.nas.
corpus.
In
fact,
composition of some of the ep;c's
I
and so on to
think that
"old" stories was
likely inspired by the epic itself.
(Biardeau
the very
has argued
this, for example, for the Na7op.khy.na story.) In the religious and historical climate of North India at the product i on of sm,:"'f: j
the tu rn of the fi rst mi 11 enn i um, 1 i terature
was
a
very
acti ve
enterpri se.
We
know
from
philosophical materials that the idea of the Veda as canonical knowledge was already well-established. but the boundaries of that canon were a matter of debate. conducted
through the
product i on
In part, that debate was of
smr'f:i
rel i gi ous1 y
authoritative works composed by humans -- which made various claims (§rut j) •
about
its
own
relationship
to
canonical
material
Stori es that the Mbh presents as hi stori cal
inc 1 uded to demonstrate to its audi ences that the epi c indeed legitimately sm:'f:i.
are ;s
As a group these stories establish
a claim that the Mbh's teachings are a further unfolding of Vedic knowledge, but this feature only emerges when they are studied collectively. As I discuss briefly in the introduction to section 0 of
4
this chapter and as I demonstrate in Chapters 3 and 4, subject matter per se is not what the stori es have in common, although a number of common themes are apparent and are important to explore (see Chapter 4).
Instead. the stories as a whole
purport to expl ai n what happens as the Pandava-Kaurava war unfolds by reference to an imagined sacred history in order to make the epic an authoritative source of that very history. In
particular,
the
epic
interprets
events
and
personal
experi ences of i ndi vi dual s affected by the war usi ng ei ght hermeneutical strategies (see Chapter 2, in particular section C)
that make the Mbh seem anci ent and fully congruent with the
authoritative Vedic tradition. demonstrate
the
; mportant
Here I am most interested to
rol e
anci 11 ary
stori es
accomplishing that purpose for the epic, and so commona 1 ; ties
of story
contents than
on
pl ay
~ocus
;n
less on
commona 1 it i es
of
rhetorical intent that the stories serve in this particular literary work. (2) When uSing the term ancillary I mean to signal both a sense of subordinate status and auxiliary functions stories.
the
~or
As discussed in this chapter. another impetus for
this study was the view that since the Indian tradition has ins; sted that these
stori es are
cannot set them aside. provide
any
overt
integral
to the epi c.
we
But since that tradition does not
discussion
of
the
process
of
epic
composition other than the Mbh's own several accounts, we must look to more general
indigenous theoretical formulations to
5
ascertai n how the presence of anci 11 ary stori es was understood in ancient times.
On this matter I propose a model (Chapter
2) based on hierarchical conceptions of main and subordinate relationships, and drawn from the intellectual tradition of Further
N8~ya§.S1:ra.
agai nst
the
1 arge
work is
body
requi red
of evi dence the
present to us, but the model
to test
the
model
anci 11 ary stori es
is promising since it derives
from the cultural and historical milieu in which the epiC was composed. Because of the relative paucity of scholarship on the ancillary stories in the Mbh, this chapter initially focuses on descri bi ng the major trends in Western schol arshi p that account for such a lack of interest.
As long as scholars held
fast to the view that the epic was essentially a war story bloated wi th subsequent accret ions of mo re or 1 ess
random
mythological, theological, legendary, and didactic materials, the substories held little interest for Western interpreters. Indeed, the peculiar consequence of that general view was that most of the contents of the Mbh -- namely the nearly fifty percent
of
it
represented
consi dered i mmateri a l t o an
by
ancillary
stories
adequate understandi ng
were of the
epic. Turning to the evidence from the literate intellectual tradition of Sanskrit scholars, I note that ancillary stories have not been studied closely, consi dered
integral
to
although they have long been
the epi c
as
one
component of
its
6
di dacti c materi al.
Many Western schol ars never questi oned the
assumpt i on
overt 1 y
that
; nterpo 1 at ions" contrast, have
and
therefore
i nfl uenti al
quest i oned
di dact; c
Ind; an
the
epi c ' s
of
port ions 1 ; mi ted
i ntell ectual s own
were
n
interest.
1 ate
In
never seemed to
assert ions
that
its
multifaceted instructional material in effect defines the Mbh. Not only does it all belong there. it is the Mbh. Indian interpreters. the epic's status as starting point of analysis.
For many
has been the
smr~j
The ancillary stories are in one
sense a record of traditional history (itih.sa). in another, just one of the epic's pedagogical devices. vi
rtu~
of thei r
In addition. by
i ncl usi on i n a work call ed the fi fth
they have sacramenta 1 powers;
to hear and to
Veda.
know them i s
meritorious in itself. 2 They are a potential means to achieve salvation. My
work
on
the
Mbh
stems
from
my
interest
in
understanding more precisely how a work so long accepted as carrying great religious authority
(sm~~j)
came to be so while
embracing ideas and practices that were patently (from the perspective
of
Vedism)
nontraditional
during
centuri es of the common era when the epi c present form.
the
early
was taki ng
its
If we take seriously traditional Indian views
of the Mbh as a coherent whole, we must come to terms with its
2kar~-:,al!' vedami dal!' vi dv .... §ravayi tvarthama§nute/l . 1 .205ab ya~cemam
trnuyannityamarsam §raddhasamanvitahl sa di rgh·amayu~ kirt; I!' ca sva·rgatil!' c.pnuyannara~1 11 .1 .207
1
anci 11 ary narrat i ve mater; a 1 .
In doi ng so. as the present
study shows. I conclude that in fact this story material was crucial to the brahmanical project of making the epic into
smrti.
The way in which the epic employs the idea of the Veda
as canonical knowledge also locates the Mbh project within a segment of the anci ent
I ndi an i nte 11 ectua 1
asserted an organic unfolding of
§ru~i
to
tradi t; on
sm:~j,
that
rather than
a sharp break between the two kinds of knowledge. Only when Western scholars began to study the Mbh as a coherent whole did questions about the role of the ancillary stories arise. as a
In this chapter. I trace this view of the epic
coherent whole from
its initial
Joseph Dah1mann in the 19th century,
bold formulation
by
through its handful of
more circumspect advocates. to current supporters.
Although
no major contemporary scholar accepts Dah1mann's thesis that the epic was composed full-blown, much contemporary Western interpretation proceeds from an assumption that the Mbh does make sense as a whole. ana 1 ysi s.
Using distinctly different methods of
those interpreters are cl ari fyi ng the structural
principles that underlie the composition of the Sanskrit Mbh. These various newer interpretations. under way now for approximately extensive
fifty
study
of
years. topics
periphery of epic studies.
Mbh
have
received
have
set
the
previously
stage
relegated
for to
more the
Mythological underpinnings of the
particularly
Dumezi1. Biardeau, and Hi1tebeite1.
extended
treatment
from
Other materials, such as
8
the ancillary stories r~jadharma
and lengthy didactic passages
(e.g .•
and fIIoksadharma sections of the §.n'tiparvan), have
only quite recently received serious attention from European and American scholars.
By reviewing the major approaches that
support a unitary view of the epic. I locate the current study of ancillary stories in the broader context of Mbh studies. Just
as
there
is
still
no
definitive
resolution
to
the
cont roversy over the degree of i nterna 1 coherence exhi bi ted by the
Sanskri t
Mbh.
there
is
1 i kewi se
no
consensus
on
the
questi on of the integral versus peri pheral status of anci 11 ary stories in the epic.
As I attempt to show. in the past fifty
years the wei ght of preference has shi fted somewhat
toward
approaching the Mbh as an intelligible whole. Scho1 arship funct ions
of the
that
bears
anci 11 ary
di rect 1 y stori es
upon
in
the
the
roles
Mbh
is
and
rather
1 i mi ted, qui te di verse, but neverthe 1 ess ri ch and provocat i ve. As I indicate, only Madeleine Biardeau. Robert Goldman, James Fitzgerald. Wendy Doniger (0' Flaherty) specifically
explored
how
and
why
J
and Ian Proudfoot have
particular
subta1es
groups of them interact with the Bharata frame story. concl usi ons show that multiple.
General
the uses
principles
of stori es in of
composition
Their
the Mbh that
or
are
might
explain how and why subtales occur where they do in the Mbh have yet to be articulated (although the techniques of oralformulaic analysis are promising in this regard).
To date,
the relatively small amount of scholarship available suggests
9
that no single interpretation adequately explains every case. Each story or story cluster must be examined in its immediate context to understand ; ts rol e
in
re1 ati on to the general
themes and narrative structure of the Mbh.
In Chapter 3 I
discuss the major themes of ancillary stories in each of the epi c' s ei ghteen maj or sect ions (parvan). showi ng how they vary from section to section. Subta 1 es are interspersed th roughout the cr; t; ca 1 text of the Mbh. itself comprised of 78.200 verses and prose sections in ei ghteen major "books" (parvans). (the
Hariva~§a.
as well as an appendi x
called a khi7a); in total. the epic contains
nearly 2.000 chapters (adhy.yas).
The tales may be long or
short. 3 clustered together
often the case)
sing1y.4
(as i s
Their subject matter varies widely.
or
told
but virtually
all concern the activities and experiences of deities. sages. royal figures. heroes. or heroines -- just as one might expect in epic literature. S 3For example. the well-known story of Na1a is told in 29 chapters and more than 800 verses. The tale of Jantu. a young prince sacrificed to produce 100 sons for his father, is told in a mere 19 verses.
~he sage Markandeya successively relates six tales in book three; the trouo1es of Indra. king of the gods. and his wife ~aci are the topic of a story in book five. SA tale may. in its own right. present the most significant highlights of a king's career (e.g .• the story of Rama) J a particular exploit of a deity (e.g., how and why Indra. king of the gods. destroyed Saubha. city of the demon king, ~alva), or the biography of a crucial epic character (e.g .• the story of Amb •• proximate cause of death of the beloved Bhisma). As I endeavor to show, however. the stories not only lend meaning to the epic as a whole. but are also
10
Unti 1
fai r1 y
recent 1 y,
there
were
three
general
categori es of scho1 ar1 y thought about the epi c' s anci 11 ary stori es.
The fi rst group consi sts of Indi an scho1 ars who
attempt to gl ean hi stori ca 1
i nformati on from the epi c,
the
second consists of scholars who focus on the didactic intent of the Mbh,
and the thi rd group includes scho1 ars who use
porti ons of the anci 11ary materi a1 to advance 1 arger arguments about the nature of epic, its historical background, and/or its larger religious significance in the development of Hindu traditions.
Each group is discussed below.
A strong current of scho1 arshi pin Indi a regards the epi c as history and concerns itself with reconstructing economic, political,
social,
and
religious
facts
from
it.
These
scholars have paid no special attention to the secondary tales since they
consider
all
contents
sources of historical evidence.
as
legitimate
potential
Beyond the acknowledgment of
its existence, there will be no further examination of this scholarship in the present study. internal
coherence of the
functions.
My interest focuses on the
Sanskrit Mbh and its
rhetorical
To pursue these concerns, I prefer to begin with
the epic in its current form,
that is, a textual
(and oral)
tradition preserved relatively intact since at least the 5th century
C.E.
Given
that
starting
point,
part and parcel of its rhetorical project.
the
purported
11
historicity of Mbh events is not an immediate concern. 6 An
influential
strand
of
the
brahman
intellectual
tradition has emphasized the overall didactic intent of the
Mbh and shows less concern about the demonstrable veracity of its contents in terms of modern notions of historical fact. This second group seems not to have singled out the ancillary stories for analysis per se, but evaluates them along with the other narrative portions to derive general conclusions about what the epic teaches. In the West, some of the tales have been much admired as independent stories, but they were long considered incidental to the so-called main or core story of the BhBrata war, therefore Europe
and
recently.
recei ved Ameri ca scholars
1 i ttl e pri or
attenti on to
such
the
as
Mbh scho1 ars
from
1940s
and
and
Madeleine
in
More
1950s.
A1f
Biardeau,
Hi1tebeite1, James Fitzgerald, and Ian Proudfoot have begun to explore the re1 evance of
certai n anci 11 ary stori es to
the
6Historians have profitably worked with the MBh to inform thei r understandi n9 of anci ent Indi an hi story. They study the epic. however, from an historiographic point of view -- as presenting a particular view of the past. Romi1a Thapar, for example, regards the epic as a literary crystallization of an heroic ideal. In her view, it records the transition between two kinds of society in ancient India, one characterized by tribal chiefdoms and the other by a state system with monarchy as the norm ("Hi stori an and the Epi c, If Anna 7s of the Bhandarkar Orienta7
Research
Institute,
60(1979),
p.
201).
Her method. which focuses on clarifying assumptions about the past that can be detected in the epic, is far richer than methods which focus on the MBh's historicity per se. See also her study From Lineage to State. Socia7 Formation in the MidFirst Millennium B.C. in the Ganga Val7ey. Delhi: Oxford University Press, 1990, on the nature of early Indian society during the mid-first millennium B.C.E.
12
Bharata tale of internecine war and its aftermath.
Others.
following Georges Dumezil. have studied some of the episodes as variants of prototypical Indo-European independent tales. Both groups of scholars have studied certain ancillary stories in order to understand the epic as a whole (even though their conclusions may be radically different,
e.g.,
Biardeau and
Dumezil), and therefore I have grouped them together here in order to discuss the range of scholarship on ancillary stories which I consider most significant in contemporary Mbh studies. This chapter surveys the ancillary
stories
textual/contextual Chapter
Mbh.
intellectual
2
in
latter two positions on the
order
to
develop
historical
and
arguments about their importance to the considers
tradition
of
what
ancient
the
indigenous
India
tells
us
Indian about
ancillary stories, and outlines eight hermeneutical strategies employed to make the epic
sm~~j.
In Chapter 3 I discuss the
ancillary stories in each parvan to show their tendency to address particular topics.
Chapter 4 analyzes the context and
content of a cluster of stories from the
§.n~iparvan
on
ahi~s.
(nonviolence) in order to demonstrate how they are integral to the Mbhrs rhetorical project, and as such are neither random nor casual
insertions.
The appendix contains a summary of
each ancillary story. indicates where it occurs, who tells it, and who hears it. 2.
Narrative Context of the Ancillary Tales
Before reviewing the occurrences of ancillary stories in
t h e major booksD i t may be useful t o
out1 i n e t h e
genera1
contents of t h e Mbh. Like many good s t o r i e s D t h e Mbh opens i n t h e m i d s t of action
--
actual l y s a t a pause i n t h e a c t i o n .
brahmans
has
been
performi ng
a
A group of
particular
(dv3daSavarsika s a t t r a ) i n t h e Naimisa Forest.
ritual
During one o f
t h e regular breaks i n t h e lengthy series o f r i t e s ( t h e f u l l r i t u a l w i I T occupy t h e brahmans f o r twelve years) UgraGravas a r r i v e s has
come
from
a
s a c r i f ice { sarpa avenge
his
storytelling s a c r i f iceD
Exchangi ng g r e e t i ngs ritual
sattra)
father's
session
UgraGravas
in
a
t h e y l e a r n t h a t he different
sortD a
undertaken by K i ng Janamej aya t o
death
sessions
of
t h e bard
by
snake
bite*
between the
rites
had
heard
from
V a i Sampayanas t h e r e c i t a t i o n o f the Mbh.
Dur: An Initial Survey of Structural Issues, Themes and Rhetorical Strategies, Ph.D. diss., University of Chicago. 1980.
Fitzg~rald,
0"
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