Who wrote Mrichhakatikam?

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Mrichhakatikam!

Who wrote Mrichhakatikam?

Well, the play has been written by Shudraka...

It is a phenomenal collection of ancient times which is been recognized as one of the remarkable fiction of the time.
Anxious to know more about it here it goes...
Mrcchakatika, The Little Clay Cart, is by and large viewed as the model of prakarana plays. Rather than nataka plays—among which Kalidasa's Shakuntala is prevalent—prakarana plays concern anecdotal, middle-class characters engaged with anecdotal, middle- class clashes. In Shudraka's play, Charudatta, a merchant devastated by his own positive outlook, becomes hopelessly enamored with Vasantasena, a well-off courtesan. They attempt to concrete their relationship inside a twirl of different issues, including criminal burglaries, the king’s brother by marriage claim enthusiasm for Vasantasena, and even an upheaval instigated by a goat-herd.

Two components of the play regularly astound western gatherings of people. To begin with, Vasantasena's profession. Second, Charudatta is hitched.
Vasantasena's profession isn't as cheap as a western audience of people regularly assume. She isn't simply a body available to be purchased. In the opening snapshots of the play, she rejects Sansthanaka's advances, however, he isn't just well off yet the ruler's brother by marriage. Besides, we locate her speaking Sanskrit (yet quickly) in act four. This isn't an irrelevant detail. Vasantasena is taught. She circles among the privileged of society. What's more, she circles in the open, among the movers and shakers of the group—which is to state: among the men.

In reality, Charudatta is hitched. Be that as it may, his significant other is just recognized as "the spouse", scarcely shows up in the play, and, at that point, not outside the bounds of her home. The mistress has an exceptional status in the social context of this play.
The play gives not a solitary word to worries over Charudatta's marriage. Like Duhshanta in Shakuntala, Charudatta is allowed to seek after whatever paramours attract in his consideration. The universe of Mrcchakatika is a man's reality. Just instructed mistresses like Vasantasena have their very own position in it.

This is what the entire play is all about...!

Cheers!

answered 7 years ago by Anonymous User

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