The Fall of the Indigo Jackal

The Discourse of Division and Pūrṇabhadra's Pañcatantra

By McComas Taylor

Subjects: Asian Literature
Paperback : 9780791471784, 250 pages, June 2008
Hardcover : 9780791471777, 250 pages, July 2007

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Table of contents

Acknowledgments
Abbreviations
Conventions
1. Introduction

The Textual Families of the Sanskrit Pañcatantra
Purnabhadra’s Pañcatantra
Assigning Meaning to the Pañcatantra
Questions Addressed in This Study

2. The Discourse of Division in the Pañcatantra

The Concept of Jati in the Pañcatantra
Svabhava—“Essential Nature”
Jati and Social Status
Enmity/Amity

3. The “Regime of Truth” and the Pañcatantra

The Authoritative Voice
Universalizing the Discourse: Space, Time, and Audience
The Sastric Paradigm
Intertextuality
The “Naturalization” of Discourse
A “Regime of Truth” for the Pañcatantra

4. The Discourse of Division and the Brahmanical Archive

The Origins of Varna
Svadharma—“Essential Duty”
Status
Enmity/Amity
The Cultural Context of the Discourse of Division

5. Conclusion
Appendix 1. Core Stories of the Pañcatantra Family
Appendix 2. Summary of Stories in Purnabhadra’s Pañcatantra
Notes
Glossary of Sanskrit Terms
Bibliography
Index

Contemporary critical theory is brought to the consideration of caste in the Pañcatantra, one of the best-known cycles of Indian tales.

Description

Every child growing up in India knows the story of the jackal who fell into the vat of blue dye, and discovering the power of his majestic new appearance, declared himself king of the forest. In spite of his pretenses, the jackal, eventually betrayed by his own instincts, was set upon by the other animals. This and many similar narratives are found in the Pañcatantra, the collection of Sanskrit tales for children compiled by a Jaina monk named Pūrṇabhadra in 1199 CE.

In this book, McComas Taylor looks at the discourses that give shape and structure to the fall of the indigo jackal and the other tales within the Pañcatantra. The work's fictional metasociety of animals, kings, and laundrymen are divided according to their jāti, or "kind." This discourse of caste holds that individuals' essential natures, statuses, and social circles are all determined by their birth. Taylor applies contemporary critical theory developed by Foucault, Bourdieu, Barthes, and others to show how these ideas are related to other Sanskritic master-texts, and describes the "regime of truth" that provides validation for the discourse of division.

McComas Taylor is Head of the South Asia Centre, Faculty of Asian Studies at the Australian National University.

Reviews

"…very interesting and innovative … Taylor's study has provided us with a new angle for methodology that will ensure the continuous progression of our field of study." — Journal of Asian Studies

"This is a fine piece of scholarship. Nothing like this exists for the Indian folklore tradition. McComas Taylor presents the multifaceted significance of the Pañcatantra, which is possibly the most popular book within India. The stories from this collection spread across the world, so this book is also significant for the global study of folktales." — Patrick Olivelle, translator and editor of The Pañcatantra: The Book of India's Folk Wisdom