Karnad’s Tughlaq: A Critique of Authoritarianism and Power

Authors

  • Dr. Sarita Bang

Keywords:

Authoritarianism; Power; Idealism; Political Disillusionment; Governance; State Violence; Spectacle; Opportunism; Manipulation; Sovereignty

Abstract

Girish Karnad’s Tughlaq (1964) remains one of the most incisive political plays in modern Indian theatre, examining the transformation of Muhammad bin Tughlaq from an enlightened visionary into a tyrannical ruler. Set in fourteenth-century Delhi yet resonant with post-independence Indian anxieties, the play interrogates the tension between utopian idealism and political pragmatism. Karnad depicts the Sultan’s rational reforms—interfaith governance, administrative restructuring, and currency innovation—as collapsing under social resistance, bureaucratic mismanagement, and internal contradictions. As his authority weakens, Tughlaq resorts increasingly to coercion, punishment, and surveillance, initiating a descent into authoritarian control and psychological fragmentation. The study argues that Tughlaq reveals authoritarianism as emerging not solely from cruelty but from idealism pursued without empathy or awareness of material realities. Through an analysis of power, spectacle, opportunistic politics, and the Sultan’s deepening alienation, this paper demonstrates how Karnad constructs a political tragedy that retains powerful relevance to contemporary governmental dynamics.

References

Karnad, Girish. Tughlaq. Oxford University Press, 1972.

Barani, Ziauddin. Tarikh-i-Firoz Shahi. 14th c., translated editions before 2010.

Anantha Murthy, U.R. “Introduction to Tughlaq.” OUP, 1972.

Dharwadker, Aparna Bhargava. Theatres of Independence. University of Iowa Press, 2005.

Foucault, Michel. Discipline and Punish. Vintage Books, 1977.

Basham, A.L. The Wonder That Was India. Rupa & Co., 1967.

Thapar, Romila. A History of India, Vol. I. Penguin, 1966.

Nandy, Ashis. The Intimate Enemy. Oxford University Press, 1983.

Mehta, Ved. “Muhammad Tughlaq.” The New Yorker, 1965.

Downloads

How to Cite

Dr. Sarita Bang. (2015). Karnad’s Tughlaq: A Critique of Authoritarianism and Power. International Journal of Engineering, Science and Humanities, 5(3), 33–37. Retrieved from https://www.ijesh.com/j/article/view/311

Similar Articles

<< < 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 > >> 

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.