Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Epigraph
- Contents
- List of Tables
- List of Abbreviations
- Acknowledgements
- Glossary
- Note on Transliteration, Translation and Dates
- Contemporary Place Names and their Nineteenth Century Spellings
- Introduction
- 1 Geographical Imagination and Narratives of a Region
- 2 Mobility, Polity, Territory
- 3 Itinerants of the Thar: Mobility and Circulation
- 4 Expanding State Contracting Space: The Thar in the Nineteenth Century
- 5 Narratives of Mobility and Mobility of Narratives
- conclusion
- Bibliography
- Appendix I Jodhpur King List
- Appendix II Bikaner King List
- Appendix III Jaisalmer King List
- Index
5 - Narratives of Mobility and Mobility of Narratives
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 March 2016
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Epigraph
- Contents
- List of Tables
- List of Abbreviations
- Acknowledgements
- Glossary
- Note on Transliteration, Translation and Dates
- Contemporary Place Names and their Nineteenth Century Spellings
- Introduction
- 1 Geographical Imagination and Narratives of a Region
- 2 Mobility, Polity, Territory
- 3 Itinerants of the Thar: Mobility and Circulation
- 4 Expanding State Contracting Space: The Thar in the Nineteenth Century
- 5 Narratives of Mobility and Mobility of Narratives
- conclusion
- Bibliography
- Appendix I Jodhpur King List
- Appendix II Bikaner King List
- Appendix III Jaisalmer King List
- Index
Summary
“There are no entrails left in my belly
So I cannot take opium or food any more
Accept the respects of your warrior Dhembo
For we shall now meet in the court of God Rama!”
With these words Dhembo gave up his life
And became a dweller in heaven
Pabuji and his men reflected on this with great sadness
But Dhembo played a trick on the knights.
Medieval Rajput courts in the Thar were home to some of the richest poetic and prose traditions in Sanskrit, Dingal and Braj Bhasha. However, as discussed in earlier chapters, these traditions were instrumental in reiterating Rajput norms of kingship and fostering the idea of Rajput exclusivity. Even as Rajput claims to kingship were contested by groups exercising control on the frontiers, Rajput literary traditions focusing on Rajput heroism and sacrifice, completely glossed over claims of other groups. Therefore, though a range of mobile groups continuously traversed the Thar, they often failed to find space in the written accounts and histories of the region, which based themselves on Rajput narrative traditions. However, the existence of a rich body of oral folk traditions in Rajasthan, ranging from lore dedicated to folk deities to songs of separation, preserve narratives that are lost in written traditions. The mobility of such groups often gives an impression of narratives of lost in movements, but in my understanding they are narratives of movement over time and space.
The networks of pastoral and commercial circulation in the Thar region were also the very networks on which the oral traditions of the region traveled. Social groups continually on the move in the Thar preserved their history through bards, not just the legendary Charans but also genealogists, storytellers and musicians of various kinds like Bhats, Motisars, Nayaks, Bhopas, Langas, Mirasis and Manganiyars. These bards put genealogies together, created the corpus of oral accounts that were transmitted across the wide space of the Thar and also across generations as well as nurtured rich musical traditions in the region. The transmission of these traditions recreated them over space and time at multiple levels and led to several interpretations of these traditions by the communities themselves. Ambulatory bards traveled around the vast Thar Desert connecting hamlets and populations spatially and temporally.
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- Nomadic NarrativesA History of Mobility and Identity in the Great Indian Desert, pp. 217 - 263Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2016