Columbia International Affairs Online: Working Papers

CIAO DATE: 03/2010

Seeing Beyond Dharma: Ethical Excellence in Vikram and Vetaal Stories

Vasanthi Srinivasan

November 2010

Center for the Advanced Study of India

Abstract

Besides canonical texts such as Bhagavad Gita and Dharmasutras, reflections upon dharma’s complexity and dilemmas abound in popular narratives such as Pancatantra, Hitopadesa and Vikram and Vetaal stories. Popularised by Amar Chitra Katha and Chanda Mama as Vikram and Vetaal, this classic is second only to Pancatantra and has been part of the narrative repertoire of many Indians. It is about the encounters between King Vikramaditya and a superhuman daemon, Vetala dwelling in a corpse. In several stories, King Vikramaditya is presented with two or more instances of noble or generous or virtuous actions and asked to judge which is greater. This essay examines ethical reasoning and judgment as they are presented in five stories about superlative nobility, magnanimity and virtue. Focusing on Vikramaditya’s verdicts, I argue that judging extraordinary nobility or generosity or virtue involves going beyond dharma whether we take it as customary duty (based on caste and class, stage of life or family usage) or even occupational duty (svadharma). It appears that ethical greatness is all about sovereign gestures through which one responds to the challenges posed by the sacrifices of others. Vasanthi Srinivasan Visiting Scholar, Center for the Advanced Study of India Reader, Department of Political Science, University of Hyderabad.