Prem wrote:One Bride for 2 Brothers: A Custom Fades in India
I first read about polyandry in some areas near Himalayas from the famous kannada novel
Parva. This is a wonderful book written by a very famous Kannada write SL Bhyrappa. This has been translated into Telugu, Bengali, Tamil, English etc. This is a beautiful novel , which imagines how Mahabharatha would have taken place if there was absolutely no mythology associated with it. The story is written through the eyes of Kunti, Bheema, Draupadi, Satyaki, Arjuna etc. A very thought provoking novel. It sort of lingers in my mind long after I have finished reading the novel.
Brihaspati - I think this book might appeal to you guys too, given how you try to see beyond mythology in our narratives.
I recently finished reading it for the second time a month or so back, and it still haunts me. It is one book which looks at the logistics of Mahabharatha and how it affects everyone. How were the lakhs of soldiers fed, how the smell of human excreta was overpowering in the battle field, how did the warriors fight etc.
Try imagining Mahabharatha where there are no miracles, no super-humans, no mysterious births, no magical powers etc, no living god(krishna is potrayed as a statesman, not as God) and then think how it would have played out in history. But it still upholds the vedas as basis of Dharma though. SL Bhyrappa provides such a narrative. It is thought-provoking and makes you think.
It is not for those who brook no re-interpretations of epics and don't want anyone messing about with Vyasa's version. It definitely brings a new perspective to Mahabharatha, at least it did to mine.