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Originally posted by: charminggenie
Commencement on a fabulous thread.
I have a question , do different translations, perspectives end up being reflection of the society at that point specifically in terms of how an author perceives his/her characters?
Like for instance in the cases of Krishna and Karna. The latter more so, has his character became more popular or specifically presented as the "Tragic Hero" , because audience and society wants to root for a character who failed because of external compulsions than his own inner weaknesses.
the "Tragic Hero" , because audience and society wants to root for a character who failed because of external compulsions than his own inner weaknesses.
Originally posted by: charminggenie
Commencement on a fabulous thread.
I have a question , do different translations, perspectives end up being reflection of the society at that point specifically in terms of how an author perceives his/her characters?Like for instance in the cases of Krishna and Karna. The latter more so, has his character became more popular or specifically presented as the "Tragic Hero" , because audience and society wants to root for a character who failed because of external compulsions than his own inner weaknesses.
Originally posted by: charminggenie
@underlined- how does that define tragic hero just curious to know.. Tragic hero can have both external and internal factors to play upon. Inner weakenesses are attributed due to external compulsions as well. If I have certain behavior , that might be due to the environment i am brought up in or society around me must have attributed those characteristic in me.
Originally posted by: abhijitbasu
Good points. Different versions of the MB at different times do perhaps carry some baggage of that age. In the older bard (soota) forms, it was basically a Warrior saga, sung as paean of heroic victory ('Jaya'). In later 'Bhrigu clan' versions, more and more devotional and didactic accretions happened. This is the Western scholarly view, which seems to have a certain merit, though one cannot think of MB without its subtle spiritual message of Krshna and the Gita.
As regards the Karna story, it is kind of unique within the gamut of the great epic. MB is a story of 'niyati' and 'kaal' - destiny and Time, whereas Ramayana is a story of Purushakara - of human efforts of Ram, Lakshman, Hanuman etc. Karna is the one great epitome of Purushakara in MB -- all his lifebeing a great tale of a man's heroic struggle against his destiny. These themes have been covered in greater detail in my book.
@abhijitbasu
Thank you sir. The political reasoning that you provided is very logical. I am aware of the bits about his extra appendages. But to forgive 99 heinous crimes like rape and then to give death penalty for a 100th minor insult was not quite digestible to me.