International Journal For Multidisciplinary Research
E-ISSN: 2582-2160
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A Widely Indexed Open Access Peer Reviewed Multidisciplinary Bi-monthly Scholarly International Journal
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Volume 8 Issue 2
March-April 2026
Indexing Partners
Exile, Epic Memory, and Civilizational Continuity
| Author(s) | Kumar Vatsal, Dr. S. K. Paul |
|---|---|
| Country | India |
| Abstract | Abstract Exile is one of the most enduring narrative structures through which civilizations imagine crisis, ethical testing, and cultural survival. In the Indian epics, exile is not merely a plot device but a civilizational instrument: it generates moral pedagogy, preserves collective memory, and produces models of identity under rupture. This research article examines how exile functions in the Mahabharata and the Ramayana as a formative condition that transforms individuals and communities while ensuring the long continuity of epic memory across time, language, and geography. It argues that epic exile performs three interlinked roles: (i) it becomes an ethical laboratory in which dharma is clarified through trial; (ii) it acts as a memory-machine that stores cultural values, anxieties, and ideals; and (iii) it enables civilizational continuity by remaining translatable into new historical contexts—colonialism, Partition, migration, and diaspora. The study engages exile both as a physical displacement and as an existential condition, drawing on the broad understanding articulated in modern exile discourse. It also foregrounds the epics’ capacity to outlast political formations: nations may fracture, dynasties may vanish, but epic narratives persist because they encode shared human experiences of loss, belonging, and moral decision. Comparative attention is given to the forced exile of the Pandavas and the voluntary exile of Rama, demonstrating how each epic develops a distinctive ethical vocabulary: the Mahabharata emphasizes ambiguity and debate, while the Ramayana privileges exemplarity, sacrifice, and restraint. Finally, the article connects epic exile to civilizational continuity by considering the epics’ afterlives in translation, performance, and diasporic circulation, showing how exile, as a theme, continually renews epic relevance. |
| Keywords | Keywords: Exile; Epic Memory, Mahabharata, Ramayana, Dharma, Cultural Continuity, Myth and History, Diaspora, Postcolonial Reception |
| Field | Arts |
| Published In | Volume 7, Issue 6, November-December 2025 |
| Published On | 2025-12-28 |
| DOI | https://doi.org/10.36948/ijfmr.2025.v07i06.64835 |
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E-ISSN 2582-2160
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IJFMR DOI prefix is
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