THE THEME OF
INCOMPLETENESS IN
GIRISH KARNAD’S HAYAVADANA
Girish Karnad’s play
Hayavadana deals with the theme of incompleteness. Karnad has tried to
illustrate incompleteness with divine, human and animal figures. Ganesha has
the elephant head and the human body. The transposition of heads does not give
Devadatta , Kapila and Padmini completeness. Only Hayavadana, who had the horse
head and the human body, achieves completeness. He wanted to become a complete
human being , but he becomes a complete horse.
LITERATURE
In this play, Karnad has
presented the theme of incompleteness at three levels- Divine, Human and Animal.
When the play begins, “ a mask of Ganesha is brought on the stage and kept on
the chair. The Bhagavata sings verses in praise of Ganesha, accompanied by his
musicians.From the very beginning we see the use of the word ‘incompleteness’.
Ganesha is worshipped as the destroyer of
incompleteness. Here the
Bhagavatta regards Ganesha the embodiment of incompleteness because Ganesha has
an elephant head and a human body.
Devadatta and Kapila are
close friends. Devadatta marries Padmini. One day they plan a short visit to
Ujjain. Kapila drives the cart. Padmini admires Kapila’s physique. Now
Devadatta does not like this. Kapila offers to go to the temple of Rudra.
Padmini immediately agrees while Devdatta stays back. Then Devadatta goes to
the temple of Kali and hacks off his head with a sword kept there. In course of
events Kapila also hacks off his head.But when Padmini takes sword, Goddess
Kali appears and asks her to put the heads on their bodies and press the sword
on their necks and they will be alive again. Out of eagerness she puts the
heads on the wrong bodies and presses the sword. Both of them come to life but
three are greatly surprised. They saw the attachment of the head of Kapila and
the body of Devadatta and the head of Devadatta and the body of Kapila. Kapila
with Devadatta’s body claims Padmini. He argues that it is with the body that
Padmini took the vows of marriage before the sacred fire and the child which
she is carrying in her womb is the seed of that body. Then they go to a sage
who announces that just as Kalp Vriksha is supreme amongst all the trees in the
same way head is supreme of all human limbs. The body who has the head of
Devadatta is indeed Devadatta. The body who has the head of Kapila is indeed
Kapila. So Kapila becomes very sad and goes to the forest.
RESEARCH PAPER
Hayavadana has the horse
head and the human body. He wants to become a complete human being. ‘Haya’ is a
Sanskrit word which means ‘horse’. ‘Vadana’ is also a Sankrit word which means
‘ face’. He is the son of the Princess of Karnataka. She fell in love with a white
stallion. She was married off with it.But after five years she found it a
gandharva.,who became a horse because of the curse of the God Kuber. After fifteen
years of human love he had become his original self again. Released from his curse, he asked the Princess to accompany him to
his Heavenly Abode. But she wanted him to become a horse again. So he cursed
her to be a horse herself. She became a mare and galloped away without thinking
in the least of Hayavadana, the product of her marriage with the white
stallion. So Hayavadana is in search of identity and completeness of his
physical body. He wants to get rid
of his horse-face. He
visits many religious places and meets a number of sages. But he is not able to
get rid of his horseface.
The Bhagavatta asks him to
go to the temple of Kali and request her to make him complete. Even before he
could say make him complete man, the goddess says: ‘So be it’ and disappears.
So now he becomes a complete horse. But he does not become a complete being
because he still has human voice. At the end of the play, he gets his horse
voice. “Hayavadana achieves completeness when finally he becomes a complete
horse and loses the human voice through singing the Indian National Anthem. But
this is one-sided completeness. But for human being, who is a combination of
flesh and spirit, body and mind, completeness requires a harmonical
relationship between body and mind but Cartesian division seems to be a
perennial irresolvable problem for man. The major reality of this world is
selfdivision. Both man and society are self-divided and disturbing antinomies
struggle for supremacy. The problem of Hayavadana, alienation,
absurdity, incompleteness and search for identity are central of the plays of
Karnad. Incompleteness is an inescapable and insurmountable reality. This
concept helps to solve such riddles in Hayavadana as why Hayavadana’s mother
chooses for her husband a stallion rather than a man and why Goddess Kali makes
Hayavadana a complete horse instead of a complete man.”
Thus , Karnad has presented
the theme of incompleteness at three levels- Divine , Human and Animal.
Bagavatta regards Ganesha incomplete because he has the elephant head and the
human body. But at the end of the play, he praises Ganesha: “Unfathomable
indeed is the mercy of the Elephant-headed Ganesha. He fulfils the desire of
all – a grandson to grandfather, a smile to a child, a neigh to a horse. How
indeed can one describe his glory in our poor, disabled words ?”
In the case of Devadatta ,
Kapila and Padmini, we see that they fail to achieve completeness. They all
die. But Hayavadana achieves completeness. He wanted to become a man. But he
becomes a complete horse. So the theme of incompleteness has been nicely
presented in this play.
Composed By,
BIKASH MAITY
Finely written.
ReplyDeleteTnk u for ur notes! If possible add little more from mind and body perspective...
ReplyDeleteIt is certainly of literary interest though not philosophically.
ReplyDeleteThe mainstay of being is soul..The indestructible one.
When you match horoscopes they are headless too!
The half souls unite to create the single one, just as it happens in the samadhi even in physical mating.
The playwright wishes to keep the interest intact, but the idea of solular union transcends fictional differentiation.
Well Explained👏
ReplyDeleteDecent one
ReplyDeleteThank you
ReplyDelete