Thursday, December 25, 2025

Mohan Rakesh and Girish Karnad

 While both Mohan Rakesh and Girish Karnad are pillars of post-independence Indian drama, they offer distinct lenses through which to view the human condition. Weighing their work involves looking at their different approaches to source material, language, and psychological depth: 

1. Handling of History and Myth
  • Girish Karnad: Primarily uses myth and folklore (e.g., HayavadanaNaga-Mandala) or distant history (Tughlaq) as allegories for contemporary political and social dilemmas. He "gives a turn of the screw" to traditional tales to explore modern existentialism and power dynamics.
  • Mohan Rakesh: Focuses on re-interpreting historical figures to explore personal, internal crises. In  (Kalidasa) and  (Nanda), he uses history not as a political allegory, but as a backdrop to examine the alienation and fragmentation of the individual. 
2. Thematic Focus: Political vs. Psychological
  • Karnad’s plays often grapple with external power structures, social hierarchy, and the "incompleteness" of man in a cultural context. His work is deeply engaged with the "politics of the now," even when set in the past.
  • Rakesh’s strength lies in psychological realism and the "surrounding reality" of the urban middle class. In Adhe Adhure, he pioneered the "new drama" (Naye Natak) in Hindi, focusing on the breakdown of family units, miscommunication, and the existential void of modern life. 
3. Dramatic Form and Language
  • Karnad is an experimentalist who blended Western techniques (like Brechtian alienation) with folk traditions (like Yakshagana masks and narrators). His plays are often spectacle-oriented and designed for a "total theatre" experience.
  • Rakesh revolutionized the Hindi dramatic idiom. He stripped away the flowery Sanskritized language of earlier Hindi drama to create a crisp, evocative dialogue that mirrored the internal tensions of his characters. His innovations were more subtle, focusing on the "friction of thought" rather than traditional stagecraft. 
4. Portrayal of Women
  • Karnad's female characters, like Padmini (Hayavadana) or Rani (Naga-Mandala), often possess a strong sexual agency and quest for independence against patriarchal constraints.
  • Rakesh's women, such as Mallika (Ashadh Ka Ek Din) or Savitri (Adhe Adhure), are defined by their emotional endurance and the tragic burden of making choices in a world that offers no perfect solutions. 
Summary Table
Feature Mohan RakeshGirish Karnad
Primary SourceRecent History / Urban LifeMyth / Folklore / Ancient History
Core ThemePersonal Alienation & IncompletenessPower, Social Responsibility & Mythic Re-birth
StagecraftPsychological RealismFolk-Theatrical & Ritualistic Experiments
LanguageModern, Sharp Hindi IdiomMultilingual (Kannada/English) & Symbolic
To explore their work further, you can find the Collected Plays of Girish Karnad and the seminal works of Mohan Rakesh on Amazon.
Would you like a comparative scene-by-scene analysis of how these two authors handle a similar theme, such as "man's search for wholeness"?

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