International Journal on Science and Technology

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Depiction of Society in Bāṇabhaṭṭa’s Kādambarī - A concise study

Author(s) Mr. SAMIRAN NATH DEV SARMA
Country India
Abstract Situated at the twilight of the Gupta post Gupta transition, Bāṇabhaṭṭa’s Kādambarī (c. 7th century CE) offers one of the richest narrative portraits of early medieval Indian society. Far more than a courtly romance, the tale’s nested stories depict a spectrum of social locations—from imperial palaces and bustling entrepôts to ascetic hermitages and liminal forest shrines—revealing how political power, gendered agency, caste hierarchies, and religious pluralism co existed in dynamic tension. This article provides a 3,000 word socio cultural reading of Kādambarī that brings together recent historiography, literary theory, and comparative sociology.
Section I reconstructs Bāṇa’s intellectual milieu at King Harṣavardhana’s court, showing how the prose romance blends Sanskrit cosmopolitan mārga style with local idioms to fashion a prototype for later kathā literature. Section II analyses the text’s representation of kingship—particularly the figure of Candrāpīḍa—as a performative ideal grounded in the ethical idiom of dharma yet reliant on the spectacle of aesthetic consumption and military power. Section III turns to urban settings such as Ujjayinī, parsing the vivid descriptions of marketplaces, artisans, courtesans, and transregional traders as evidence for a monetised economy and proto global connectivity.
Subsequent sections examine (a) varṇa jāti stratification and moments of social mobility that complicate rigid caste binaries; (b) women’s voices, highlighting both Gandharva princess Kadambarī’s autonomy and Mahāśvetā’s ascetic resistance to patriarchal norms; (c) the co presence of Brahmanical, Buddhist, and folk cult practitioners in public ritual space; (d) pedagogical networks that link hermitages to royal universities; and (e) the affective regime of love (śṛṅgāra) and friendship (sakhya) as moral currencies that regulate social obligation.
The article argues that Kādambarī should be read not simply as an escapist fantasy but as a sophisticated mirror in which Bāṇa critiques—and at times subverts—the social orders of his day. By foregrounding humour, irony, and allegorical transformation, the romance exposes the contingency of status and the porous boundaries between court and forest, mortal and divine, male and female. Ultimately, Kādambarī models a society held together less by coercive law than by aesthetic empathy and ethical reciprocity—an insight with renewed relevance for twenty first century debates on pluralism and social justice.
Keywords Sanskrit prose romance; social stratification; gender; Harṣa court; early medieval India
Field Arts
Published In Volume 16, Issue 3, July-September 2025
Published On 2025-07-24
DOI https://doi.org/10.71097/IJSAT.v16.i3.7225
Short DOI https://doi.org/g9vdc2

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