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This paper examines the seventh-century Sanskrit prose romance Kadambari as a landmark of classical Indian literature. It analyzes Bāṇabhaṭṭa’s innovative use of the kathā (tale-within-a-tale) structure, his ornate gadya kāvya (prose poetry) style, and the Buddhist-inflected metaphysics of rebirth that underpins the plot. The paper argues that the novel’s circular narrative is not mere ornament but a formal embodiment of saṃsāra —the cycle of death and rebirth—while the intense viraha (separation in love) functions as a metaphor for spiritual longing.

The plot hinges on a curse by the sage Durvāsas, forcing the lovers to die and be reborn. Unlike Greek tragedy, where fate is external and irrational, here the curse operates within a karmic system: each character’s suffering is the fruit of past actions. The reunion of Candrāpīḍa and Kadambari (after he is reincarnated as Vaṃśaka, she as Mahāśvetā) suggests that love survives bodily death—a Buddhist-inflected but distinctly worldly salvation.

Composed in the early 7th century CE during the reign of King Harṣavardhana, Kadambari is one of the longest and most celebrated prose romances in world literature. Bāṇa, a court poet, left the work unfinished; it was completed by his son Bhūṣaṇabhaṭṭa. The story revolves around the passionate love between the prince Candrāpīḍa and the celestial nymph Kadambari, thwarted by a curse that causes their repeated deaths and reincarnations across multiple lifetimes.

The text opens with a frame narrative: Bāṇa himself visits the court of King Harṣa, who asks him to tell a story. What follows is a nested series of tales. The outer frame involves the bard Vaṃśaka; inside that, the sage Jābāli narrates the past life of Candrāpīḍa. This Chinese-box structure creates multiple temporal layers, forcing the reader to piece together causality across lifetimes—mirroring the Buddhist principle that actions in one life bear fruit in another.

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This paper examines the seventh-century Sanskrit prose romance Kadambari as a landmark of classical Indian literature. It analyzes Bāṇabhaṭṭa’s innovative use of the kathā (tale-within-a-tale) structure, his ornate gadya kāvya (prose poetry) style, and the Buddhist-inflected metaphysics of rebirth that underpins the plot. The paper argues that the novel’s circular narrative is not mere ornament but a formal embodiment of saṃsāra —the cycle of death and rebirth—while the intense viraha (separation in love) functions as a metaphor for spiritual longing.

The plot hinges on a curse by the sage Durvāsas, forcing the lovers to die and be reborn. Unlike Greek tragedy, where fate is external and irrational, here the curse operates within a karmic system: each character’s suffering is the fruit of past actions. The reunion of Candrāpīḍa and Kadambari (after he is reincarnated as Vaṃśaka, she as Mahāśvetā) suggests that love survives bodily death—a Buddhist-inflected but distinctly worldly salvation. kadambari pdf

Composed in the early 7th century CE during the reign of King Harṣavardhana, Kadambari is one of the longest and most celebrated prose romances in world literature. Bāṇa, a court poet, left the work unfinished; it was completed by his son Bhūṣaṇabhaṭṭa. The story revolves around the passionate love between the prince Candrāpīḍa and the celestial nymph Kadambari, thwarted by a curse that causes their repeated deaths and reincarnations across multiple lifetimes. The plot hinges on a curse by the

The text opens with a frame narrative: Bāṇa himself visits the court of King Harṣa, who asks him to tell a story. What follows is a nested series of tales. The outer frame involves the bard Vaṃśaka; inside that, the sage Jābāli narrates the past life of Candrāpīḍa. This Chinese-box structure creates multiple temporal layers, forcing the reader to piece together causality across lifetimes—mirroring the Buddhist principle that actions in one life bear fruit in another. Composed in the early 7th century CE during

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