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Whose Immortal Picture Stories - Amar Chitra Katha and the Construction of Indian Identities PDF

498 Pages·2005·15.37 MB·English
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Copyright by Karline Marie McLain 2005 The Dissertation Committee for Karline Marie McLain certifies that this is the approved version of the following dissertation: Whose Immortal Picture Stories?: Amar Chitra Katha and the Construction of Indian Identities Committee: Janice Leoshko, Co-Supervisor Martha Ann Selby, Co-Supervisor Kathryn Hansen Syed Akbar Hyder Patrick Olivelle Cynthia Talbot Whose Immortal Picture Stories?: Amar Chitra Katha and the Construction of Indian Identities by Karline Marie McLain, B.A., M.A. Dissertation Presented to the Faculty of the Graduate School of The University of Texas at Austin in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy The University of Texas at Austin May, 2005 Acknowledgements This dissertation has benefited from the generosity of many people and institutions. First and foremost, I thank all of the comic book artists, authors, editors, and fans who gave generously of their time and insight, without whom this project would not have been possible. I am particularly grateful to Anant Pai for his hospitality and wealth of stories and to Reena Puri for her friendship. I also thank Padmini Mirchandani, Publishing Director at IBH in Mumbai, for granting permission to reprint images from the ACK comics; Rekha and Shanta at the Mumbai Fulbright office, as well as the AIIS officers in Delhi and Chicago, for their help with all of the necessary paperwork; and Dr. Sunanda Pal in the Literature Department at S.N.D.T. Women’s University in Mumbai. I am indebted to my advisors, Janice Leoshko and Martha Ann Selby, who had faith in this project from the very beginning. I also thank the other members of my dissertation committee for their critical guidance: Kathryn Hansen, Syed Akbar Hyder, Patrick Olivelle, and Cynthia Talbot. Many other faculty members at UT were also generous with their time and insight, especially Edeltraud Harzer, Gail Minault, Herman van Olphen, and Kamala Visweswaran. I also thank: Philip Lutgendorf at the University of Iowa, who loaned his Valmiki’s Ramayana comic book to me a decade ago, sparking my interest in Indian comics; and fellow graduate students at UT and elsewhere for their companionship and conversation. iv Finally, I thank my family: my dad, Gary, and moms, Laurie and Nancy, my brother Justin, and my extended family for their moral support throughout my college years, and their willingness to lug back suitcases full of comics after visiting me in India; Ganges and the late Miss Molly for their pleasant company during the writing process, especially during my bouts of insomnia; and, last but most of all, my husband Jonathan for his unflagging support and unfaltering presence, his “crazy” sense of adventure, and his love of Indian street food. I would not have dreamed so big without you. I have received generous financial support, for which I am very grateful. Fulbright-Hays DDRA funded my research in India from 2001-2, and writing support was provided by a three-year grant from the Dolores Zohrab Liebmann Foundation from 2002-5. A shortened version of Chapter 4 was presented at the American Academy of Religion conference in Atlanta in 2003; a segment of Chapter 1 was published as “Lifting the Mountain: Debating the Place of Science and Faith in the Production of a Krishna Comic Book,” Journal of Vaishnava Studies, 13.2 (Spring 2005). v Whose Immortal Picture Stories?: Amar Chitra Katha and the Construction of Indian Identities Publication No._____________ Karline Marie McLain, PhD The University of Texas at Austin, 2005 Co-Supervisors: Janice Leoshko, Martha Ann Selby Since it was first founded by Anant Pai in 1967, the Amar Chitra Katha comic book series has dominated the flourishing comic book market in India, selling over 440 titles and more than 86 million issues. Amar Chitra Katha means “immortal picture stories,” and as the name suggests, these comics feature India’s own immortal heroes – its mythological gods and historical leaders – as their protagonists. The first comics in the series were mythological in nature, recasting classical Sanskrit narratives of Hindu deities like Krishna, Ram, and Hanuman in the comic book format. Over the years, the series has expanded to include issues on a variety of other subjects: celebrated Hindu kings such as Shivaji and Rana Pratap; medieval bhakti poets like Tulsidas; modern Hindu sages like Swami Vivekananda; animal fables from the Pa§catantra; and colonial-era freedom fighters including Subhas Chandra Bose and Lokamanya Tilak. Through content analysis alone, it is easy to conclude that the Amar Chitra Katha comic book series conveys a hegemonic conception of “Indianness” to its readers, one that entails the marginalization of Muslims and other religious and cultural “outsiders” from the national past, the vi recasting of women in so-called “traditional” roles, and the privileging of middle-class Hindu culture. Yet the question “Whose immortal picture stories?” – whose stories do these comic books tell? – is not really this easy to answer. Hegemonic forms are always in flux: dominant ideologies do not just exist passively, but are instead actively created and recreated amidst ongoing debate. Comic books, as a form of public culture that reaches into the everyday lives of millions of middle-class Indian children, are a crucial site for ongoing debate about what it means to be Indian. In this study I examine not only how such hegemonic discourses of religion, gender, and nation have been created over time, but also the ways in which they are supported or contested in both the production and consumption of this genre of popular visual culture. vii Table of Contents List of Figures..........................................................................................................x Introduction: Whose Immortal Picture Stories?......................................................1 Research Methods and Issues.......................................................................10 Layout of the Dissertation.............................................................................25 Chapter 1: Creating Immortal Picture Stories........................................................27 The ‘Father of Indian Comics’......................................................................27 Lifting the Mountain.....................................................................................29 Producing Amar Chitra Katha......................................................................42 Marketing Amar Chitra Katha......................................................................47 The ‘Route To Your Roots’..........................................................................63 Chapter 2: Sequencing Durga: Creating “Authentic” Tales in Amar Chitra Katha68 Mediating Authenticity.................................................................................69 Sequencing Durga.........................................................................................75 Visions of Durga...........................................................................................88 A Story For ‘All Thinking Indians’?............................................................96 Chapter 3: Resacralization and the Feminine Ideal in the Visual and Ideological Culture of Amar Chitra Katha....................................................................105 Shakuntala: ‘Foremother of All Indians’....................................................107 Envisioning the Ideal Indian Woman.........................................................113 The Feminine Ideal in Amar Chitra Katha.................................................134 An Alternative Feminine Ideal in Amar Chitra Katha...............................145 Chapter 4: ‘Har Har Mahadev’: History, Mythology, and the Memory of Shivaji in Amar Chitra Katha.....................................................................................153 Shivaji: ‘A Great Liberal’?.........................................................................154 Memory and Counter-Memory: Telling Shivaji Narratives.......................164 Memory and Counter-Memory: Showing Shivaji Narratives.....................174 Memory and Counter-Memory: Counter-Narratives of Shivaji.................182 viii History and Mythology: The Coronation of Shivaji...................................192 Chapter 5: ‘Allah Ho Akbar’: Secularism, Conversion, and the Representation of Muslims in Amar Chitra Katha..................................................................199 Shah Jahan and the ‘World’s Greatest Monument to True Love’..............201 Akbar the ‘Accommodating’ and Aurangzeb the ‘Puritan’........................216 The Discourses of Secularism and Conversion..........................................229 Seeming ‘Fair And Secular’........................................................................242 Chapter 6: Massacre and the Mahatma: Showing and Telling Gandhian Politics in Amar Chitra Katha.....................................................................................245 Showing and Telling...................................................................................247 Mahatma Gandhi: A ‘Leader of the Nation’?.............................................256 The Jallianwala Bagh Massacre: A ‘Turning Point’...................................263 Who Shot the Mahatma?.............................................................................280 Chapter 7: Conclusion: Manufacturing Indianness..............................................296 Consuming Immortal Picture Stories..........................................................298 Manufacturing Indianness...........................................................................314 Appendix: Chronological List of Amar Chitra Katha Issues..............................403 Bibliography........................................................................................................451 Vita .....................................................................................................................479 ix List of Figures 1.1: Krishna, Amar Chitra Katha, no. 501 (Bombay: India Book House Pvt. Ltd., 1992 [1969]), cover. Reproduced with the permission of the publisher India Book House Pvt Ltd, Mumbai...............................................324 1.2: Krishna, Amar Chitra Katha, no. 501 (Bombay: India Book House Pvt. Ltd., 1992 [1969]), 21. Reproduced with the permission of the publisher India Book House Pvt Ltd, Mumbai........................................................325 1.3: Krishna, Amar Chitra Katha, no. 501 (Bombay: India Book House Pvt. Ltd., 1992 [1969]), 6. Reproduced with the permission of the publisher India Book House Pvt Ltd, Mumbai........................................................326 1.4: Krishnadeva Raya, Amar Chitra Katha, no. 636 (Bombay: India Book House Pvt. Ltd., 2001 [1978]), 25. Reproduced with the permission of the publisher India Book House Pvt Ltd, Mumbai...............................327 1.5: Durgesh Nandini script, 1.............................................................................328 1.6: Durgesh Nandini, Amar Chitra Katha, no. 294 (Bombay: India Book House Pvt. Ltd., 1983), 1. Reproduced with the permission of the publisher India Book House Pvt Ltd, Mumbai........................................................329 1.7: Bhagawat: The Krishna Avatar, Amar Chitra Katha, not numbered (Bombay: India Book House Pvt. Ltd., 2000), 72. Reproduced with the permission of the publisher India Book House Pvt Ltd, Mumbai.....................330 2.1: Subhas Chandra Bose, Amar Chitra Katha, no. 544 (Bombay: India Book House Pvt. Ltd., 2000 [1975]), 1. Reproduced with the permission of the publisher India Book House Pvt Ltd, Mumbai...............................331 x

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