Mirabai and The Spiritual Economy of Bhakti
Mirabai and The Spiritual Economy of Bhakti
Mirabai and The Spiritual Economy of Bhakti
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SPECIALARTICLES
Mirabai and the Spiritual Economy of Bhakti
Kumkum Sangari
In an economywherethe labourof womenand thesurplusproductionof thepeasantand artisanarecustomarily
and 'naturally'appropriatedby the rulinggroups,the high Hindu traditionssought to encompassand retainthe
managementof spiritual'surplus'and to circumscribe its availabilityalonglinesof casteandgender.In thisspiritual
economy,the liberalisingand dissentingforms of bhakti emergeas a powerfulforce whichselectivelyuses the
metaphysicof high Hinduismin an attemptto createan inappropriableexcess or transcendentvaluegrounded
in the dailiness of a materiallife within the reach of all.
Thispaper attemptsto understandthe specificcharacterof Mirabai'sbhaktias itfinds shape withinthe overlap-
ping yet contradictoryconfigurationof the patriarchalassumptionsof the medievalRajputstate, prescriptive
brahminicaltexts, and the female devotional voice as it develops in earlierand contemporarycompositionsof
male bhaktas. Whatemergesis, firstly, that though the prescriptionsof the smritisand puranasdo not survive
as law, they are availableas ideology whichshapes the customarydomain and self-descriptionof Rajputruling
groupsand constitutethe historicalmomentin whichMiralives.Secondly,in the breakingand remakingof patriar-
chal relations,Mira'sbhakti marksas well as belongs to a longer historicalmoment in whichthe prescriptions
of the smritisandpuranasareselectivelyinternalised,and the customarynexusof religiouspracticeis translated
into metaphorsand emotionalstructures.Thirdly,thoughMira'scompositionsarethemselvesambivalentlysituated,
therearesignificantdifferencesin herpersonalpracticeand in her ideologicallocation whencomparedto earlier
and contemporarymale bhaktas.And, finally, etched into Mira'senterpriseis not only the difficulty of being
'original'in an oral tradition,but also the recalcitranceand the precariousnessof personal rebellion.
Rhe paper is publishedin two parts. The second part will appearnext week.]
THE ideologicaldiversityand contradictory separatelyfrom the social practicesin which experiential base has altered but not
locations of bhakti are startling. Already it is implicated. disappeared.
embedded in vedic and puranic literature This essay attempts to understand the
Within an e0onomy where the labour of
bhakti is not restrictedto what have been specific characterof Mirabai'sbhakii as it
women and the surplus production of the
specified as movements:it is a structureof finds shape within the overlappingyet con-
peasant and artisan are customarily and tradictoryconfiguration of the patriarchal
personaldevotion which entersinto the for- 'naturally' appropriated by the ruling
mation of new groups or classes, into the
groups,the high Hindu traditionssought to ass.umptionsof the medieval Rajput state,
protests against elite hegemonic groups as prescriptive brahminical texts, and the
well as into the redefining of dominant encompass and retain the management of
female devotional voice as it develops in
spiritual 'surplus'. and to circumscribeits
classes,' and is also central to the produc- earlier and contemporarycompositions of
availabilityalong lines of caste and gender.
tion of a syncreticvocabularyin accessible male bhaktas. Eachone of these is a site for
vernacularlanguages.Though often a mode In this spiritualeconomy,the liberalisingand the production of vation schemata, of
of dissent which expresses dissatisfaction dissenting forms of bhakti emerge as a notions of sexuality and of different sorts
powerful force which selectively uses the
with certainorthodox, caste-basedmodes of of female agency. Unfortunately,from this
metaphysicof high Hinduism (maya, kar-
social ordering,brahminicalHinduism, 'ex- historical distance it is easier to ascertain
ma and rebirth),in an attempt to createan
clusive' religious institutions, and, at least their ascriptive funotions and ideological
inappropriableexcessor transcendentvalue
apparently, patriarchy, the difficulties of matrix than to determinetheir preciserelr-
measuringthe bhakti movements'potential groundedin the dailiness of a material life
tion to social practices.
within the reach of all. Even if bhakti does
for change in i pre-industrialformationare What emerges firstly is that though the
not substantivelybreak the boundaries of
enormous. This would involve ascertaining prescriptionsof the smritis and puranasdo
high Hindu traditions it redefines these in
which areas of meaning, social agency and not survive as law, they are ava,ilableas
content, modality and address, i e, in what
interaction, political participation, power, ideology which shapes the 'customary
is said, how it is said (orally-in defiance
and prescriptiveHindu orthodoxy are pris- domainand self descriptionof Rajputruling
of the centralisationof knowledge in writ-
ed open by/for the lowercaste peasants, ar- groups, and in this sense are that part of
ten texts), and who it is said to. their 'past' which constitute the historical
tisansand women who wereinvolvedin each
movement. It would entail an evaluative Bhakti makes a language for aspiration moment in which Mira lives. Secondly, in
description of the nature of the social and desire, through a notion of personal the breaking and remakingof patriarchal
transformations taking place, with the devotion and more direct communication relations, Mira's bhakti marks as well as
gradual and differential establishment of with a compassionategod, which is embed- belongs to a longer historical moment in
feudal structures as the field from which ded withinan experientialbase-particular which the prescriptionsof the smritis and
bhakti emerges and to which it responds. sorts of hierarchical,patriarchaland feudal puranasare selectivelyinternalised,and the
Finally, this would involve seeing bhakti as relations-a location which defines both the customary nexus of religious practice is
a productand partakerof a changingsocie- power ,nd the vulnerability of such a translated into metaphors and emotional
ty, which emerges alongside feudal language.Once assimilatedinto mainstream structures. Even as her bhakti sets out to
structures-whether assisting or resisting Hinduism, the critical edge of dilssenting escape, ignore or challenge certain social,
them-for several centuries. Bhakti can forms of bhakti is blunted,yet the language religious and patriarchal institutions, its
neither be understood solely in terms of its remainsevocative,long afterthe movements moral legitimacyis partiallyobtained from
social content and ideology, nor evaluated havethemselveswaned,predsely becauseits a transformationof some of these (enforce-