- Muna Madan is arguably the greatest work of Nepal's unarguably the greatest poet, Laxmi Prasad Devkota
- A miniature masterpiece, the work partly owes it popular appeal to its use of folk idioms and metres
- The drama centres around the trials and travails of a high-caste migrant worker journeying to Lhasa (Tibet) for work and back
- Apart from the constraints placed by a traditional society on romantic love, the drama also highlights the twin evils of casteism and manpower drain that have impeded Nepal's emergence from the dark shadows of its past
- The most famous line from Muna Madan, spoken by the high-caste protagonist to a "lowly" Bhote who nurses him back to health, is: "Man becomes great not by caste, but by heart"
Showing posts with label lyrical drama. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lyrical drama. Show all posts
Sunday, August 23, 2009
Muna Madan
Gurkha Nepalese Community (GNC), a Sydney-based Nepalese community organization, is staging Muna Madan as part of its annual Dashain festivities this year. A casual conversation with a dear friend of mine who also happens to be one half of a GNC power couple inspired the following thoughts about the most popular lyrical drama of the youngest Himalayan republic.
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