Bound by
Dharma, Denied by Justice: Ethical Blackholes in Yajnaseni
(Pratibha
Ray’s Yajnaseni offers a richly introspective portrait of Draupadi, whose moral
clarity and philosophical depth evoke a womanist ethos—rooted in relational
ethics, spiritual agency, and resistance to patriarchal injustice. Yet the
novel’s unwavering allegiance to a sterile, impersonal dharma undermines this
potential, rendering Draupadi’s resistance unredeemed and her suffering
ritualized. This essay explores how Yajnaseni, despite its feminist promise,
fails to reimagine the epic in a contemporary, ethically transformative
way—revealing the limits of dharma as a redemptive scaffold and the tragic
collapse of womanist possibility.)
Yajnaseni: The Story of Draupadi (1984), by
Jnanpith award-winning Odia novelist Pratibha Ray, is among the most
significant feminist retellings of Draupadi’s story from the Mahabharata. The
title Yajnaseni—meaning “born of fire”—evokes Draupadi’s mythic origins
while foregrounding her symbolic intensity. The novel traces her life as the
shared wife of the Pandavas, exploring her trials and the emotional, ethical,
and social complexities of her relationships. Through Draupadi’s voice, Ray
challenges the patriarchal ethos of the epic, offering a powerful
counter-narrative that foregrounds female agency, interiority, and resistance.
Draupadi
: Between Dharma and Identity
What Pratibha Ray accomplishes in Yajnaseni is a radical transformation of the Mahabharata into a fictional autobiography of Draupadi. Framed as an extended epistolary narrative, the novel unfolds through Draupadi’s final reflections, addressed to her eternal confidant, Krishna. As she ascends the Himalayas behind her husbands in the desolate state of the Mahaprasthana (The Great Journey/Departure) she collapses—abandoned and unacknowledged by the very men hailed as ‘Dharma-preserving’ victors. This narrative structure enables Ray to depart from the epic’s linear chronology, instead foregrounding the emotional residues of memory, betrayal, and longing. By centering Draupadi’s voice, the novel selectively revisits key episodes, employing lyrical digressions that illuminate her agency, interiority, and resistance. Yet, despite these interpretive liberties, Yajnaseni remains deeply anchored in the epic’s foundational arc.
Gender consciousness in Yajnaseni
enables Draupadi to illuminate the broader hardships of womanhood, extending
beyond her personal roles as wife, mother, and guardian of Dharma. At the heart
of the narrative lies a critique of how patriarchal structures—rooted in
objectification and exploitation—erode women’s dignity and deny them respect.
Through Draupadi’s introspective voice, the novel foregrounds the systemic
nature of gendered suffering, challenging the epic’s normative codes and
gesturing toward a feminist ethics of agency and recognition.
By reimagining the character of
Draupadi, Yajnaseni exposes the ridicule and moral burden she bears as a
woman subjected to polygamy—an arrangement glorified for men but stigmatized
when endured by women. The novel critiques the patriarchal contradiction
wherein only women are made to suffer the consequences of regressive social
customs. Through an intimate exploration of Draupadi’s inner world—her desires,
dreams, and silent agonies, often absent from the original epic—Pratibha Ray
foregrounds a feminist sensibility. This perspective extends beyond Draupadi to
encompass the muted sufferings of other women in the Mahabharata, including
Satyavati, Amba, Madri, Gandhari, and Uttara.
Draupadi, born with the prophetic
mission of upholding Dharma, is shown to internalize this burden at great
personal cost. Her emotional wound from Krishna’s rejection leads her to accept
Arjuna as her chosen spouse in a moment of quiet resignation. A pivotal moment
arises when news of the Pandavas’ supposed death in the lac house (Arakillam)
reaches her. Draupadi attempts to halt the Swayamvar, desiring to remain
unmarried and preserve her autonomy. Her failure marks a turning point: the
novel’s central ethical tension emerges here—Draupadi’s personal will is
subordinated to the political and ritual demands of the kingdom. The imperative
to protect Dharma overrides her individual agency, inaugurating a life of
sacrificial duty.
Although the Swayamvar—a ceremony
ostensibly about female choice—proceeds to appease the egos of assembled kings,
the novel resists indulging in irony. Instead, it treats this moment with
tragic gravity, underscoring the erasure of Draupadi’s voice beneath the weight
of collective expectation.
The Feminist Aversion to War
Reviewers have noted that Yajnaseni
devotes only a few pages to the description of the Kurukshetra war—a narrative
choice that underscores the novel’s critique of war as a male-centric
enterprise. Through Draupadi’s voice, Pratibha Ray articulates a deep aversion
to violence. While Draupadi is often portrayed as a warlike figure—especially
in the aftermath of her disrobing—Ray ultimately uses her to convey the
futility and moral cost of war. In this reimagining, Draupadi emerges not as an
instigator of vengeance but as a visionary who advocates for universal unity,
racial harmony, and the integration of Aryan and non-Aryan communities.
Her commitment to social justice
extends beyond rhetoric: she champions education and the upliftment of
marginalized groups, and she rejects material wealth, renouncing ornaments and
riches in favour of human welfare. Her administrative foresight is symbolized
in her proposal to build a road linking the forests to Hastinapura—an act of
infrastructural imagination that bridges the centre and the margins. In a
striking moment, she even urges Kubera to redirect his wealth toward public
development, reinforcing her ethical vision of shared prosperity over hoarded
opulence.
Ethical Hollows
While Yajnaseni displays a
modern feminist sensibility in re-examining the Mahabharata, it also leaves
unresolved tensions—particularly in its treatment of dharma. Draupadi, like the
Pandavas, is born with the sacred mandate to uphold dharma. Yet the novel
gradually reveals the hollowness of this ideal. What emerges is not a
liberating moral order, but a sterile, impersonal force—one that demands
Draupadi’s submission, containment, and renunciation, without ever offering her
protection or justice.
Throughout the narrative, dharma
functions less as an ethical compass and more as a metaphysical burden. Despite
Draupadi’s profound philosophical insight and moral clarity, she is repeatedly
told to endure suffering in silence—for the sake of cosmic balance. This dharma
fails to safeguard the innocent: Abhimanyu, Karna, the Upapaṇḍavas, and countless others perish
without cause. It justifies violence and aggression, cloaking Yudhishthira’s
passivity and Arjuna’s complicity in the language of righteousness. It rewards
survival, not justice—and that survival, as the aftermath of Kurukshetra makes
clear, is spiritually barren.
Ray’s Draupadi ultimately exposes
the contradictions of a dharma that is Vedic in tone but karmic in
effect—detached from human emotion, indifferent to suffering, and incapable of
ethical redress. In this light, Yajnaseni becomes not just a feminist
retelling, but a profound meditation on the moral bankruptcy of a cosmic order
that demands everything from women, yet gives them nothing in return.
Although there are many moments in Yajnaseni
where Draupadi’s resistance reveals piercing insight, it never gathers the
force to become a spirit of liberation. Even when she sees through patriarchal
designs and calls out her husbands, elders, and even Krishna, her resistance
remains internalized—voiced through monologue rather than enacted through
rupture. She is ultimately absorbed by the very structures she critiques, still
tethered to the roles of wife, queen, and moral anchor.
Her death affirms nothing. It ends
in quiet erasure. Her legacy remains unclaimed. This is not a failure of
character, but perhaps a failure of the novel’s imaginative reach—a reluctance
to envision a truly transformative dharma. The novel’s karmic commitment
results in an ethical thinning: the Pandavas are no longer heroes but
functionaries, bound to a dharma that demands obedience, not reflection.
Yudhishthira’s righteousness is legalistic, not ethical. Arjuna’s anguish is
resolved by Krishna through abstraction, not accountability. Bhima’s rage is
instrumentalized, not humanized. They survive—but at the cost of everything
that deserved to survive.
‘Wumanist’/ ‘Feminist’ Approaches…
While Draupadi in Yajnaseni
strongly resists the aggressions of male authority and refuses to compromise on
reclaiming her dignity and identity as a woman, she does so while remaining
firmly within the bounds of social and moral convention. In this sense, the
novel’s feminist orientation aligns more closely with a Black, ‘Third World’,
or womanist perspective than with the Western radical feminist paradigm.
Whereas Western feminism often foregrounds individual autonomy, rights-based
resistance, and a secular challenge to patriarchal structures, the womanist
approach resists the binary of submission versus rebellion. It emphasizes
relational ethics, spiritual agency, and survival within repressive systems.
Pratibha Ray’s Draupadi, though
deeply critical of male dominance, remains committed to dharma, to the
preservation of relationships, and to the moral fabric of her world. Her
resistance is not a rejection of tradition but a reimagining from within. In this,
she embodies key womanist values: the reclamation of dignity, the pursuit of
healing, the cultivation of female solidarity, and a culturally rooted sense of
agency. Yet even within this framework, the feminism of the novel reflects not
fulfilment but deferred promise—it gestures toward transformation without
realizing it. The vision remains aspirational, never fully materialized.
What is missing is a lived,
embodied concept of dharma—one that is empirical and relational, grounded in
care rather than code, memory rather than conquest, healing rather than
hierarchy. The novel does not imagine the liberatory, iconoclastic possibilities
found in alternative retellings such as Mahasweta Devi’s “Draupadi”
(Draupati, 1978, ed. Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak in Breast Stories), Chitra
Banerjee Divakaruni’s The Palace of Illusions (2008), or R. Rajashree’s Aatreyakam
(2024). These texts offer ethical ruptures and narrative reconfigurations that
remain alien to Yajnaseni’s moral universe.
Read Malayalam version here:
https://alittlesomethings.blogspot.com/2025/11/yajnaseni-story-of-draupadi-by-pratibha.html
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