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measure distinct from technical science. It might be defined as the direct expression of
the psychology of mankind from its primitive origins to the present day, transmitted
across the ages without the help of technical science. Those traditional elements or
factors of civilization that are important parts of the spirit of peoples, that are
without the aid of government ─ in fact, government itself is often tradition ─ are all
tradition, the character, the feelings, the manners and customs, the religious beliefs,
the artistic powers, and, in short, the ideas of people are documented.
Folklore includes all the customs, beliefs, and tradition that people have
as; “the generic term under which the traditional belief, customs, stories, songs and
saying current among the backward peoples or retained by uncultured classes of more
advanced people, are comprehended and included” (i). The word is defined in terms
of opposition to the upper class and an urban center. Commenting on folk, Alan
Dundes writes, “the folk were contrasted on the one hand with civilization
– they were the uncivilized element in a civilized society ─ but on the other hand they
were also contrasted with so-called savage or primitive society, which was considered
even lower on the evolutionary ladder” (3). Folk occupies a kind of middle ground
between the civilized elite and the uncivilized savage and can be perceived in the
general, folk means a group of people of one place caste, religion and nation. Approach
from this perspective, folklore appears to have a life of its own super organic process
and laws. This view of folklore is "an abstraction, founded on memories or recordings
amateurs of diverse background and interests. As a result it has given rise to many
origin, composition, transmission and diffusion of folktales, some of which have been
greatly modified and revised by the modern folklorists since the turn of century.
understanding the mentality of people from whom specific folk materials are obtained.
of raw materials for the study of exotic languages through oral texts and narratives
advanced to less civilized countries. With the expansion of Europe in the fifteenth
century, European folklore was transported to the continents of North and South
America and Africa. However, the stories of indigenous African and American peoples
did not travel back to be incorporated into the folklore of European peasants. In the
same way, ancient Indian civilization exerted an influence on Greek culture which later
centre in the diffusion of myth and folklore. Vedic deities of the Hindu Pantheon have
3
counterparts in Greek and Roman mythology: Indra, the King of the Gods and the Gods
of creation, has a congener in the Greek God, Zeus, also known as Jupiter by the
Romans. Thus, India and Western Europe have been intensively strolled as powerful
centres of the diffusion of myth and folklore. Folklore is made up of complex of genres
ballads, folk songs, dance, tradition, customs, beliefs, proverbs, riddles and tales. Every
form is unique and spontaneous, and has been preserved over many centuries. Folklore
Folklore in Nepal is still closely associated with lifestyle of the people. Folk
at midnight were until the late 1950s in Nepal. On the other hand, folk songs and
ballads continue to be immensely popular. They preserve most authentically the native
tunes of different ethnic groups. The main component of the songs in this masculine
from the mountains, valleys and the Terai. In the Terai, which stretches along the south
of Nepal, the songs are generally performed in combination with folk dances during
festivals. In hilly regions, they are sung, purely for vocal entertainment regardless of the
occasion. Every song sung at a chautara (resting place) or along winding trails echoes
through the valleys, wafts with a romantic aura. The evergreen hills, cascading rivers
and snow-capped mountains touch the inner beings of villagers, and the songs help to
Folktale is the most important form of folklore. The term ‘folktale’ implies that
the tales were composed by the folk, for the folk, about the folk or belonged to the folk.
Folktale is a traditional story that has been passed on orally from parents to child over
many generations. No one knows who that author is and there are usually different
versions of the same story. On a broader sense, folktales are traditional tales of no
4
firmly established form in which supernatural elements are subsidiary. They are not
primary concerned with ‘serious’ subjects nor are they the reflection of deep problems
ogres and magical objects are all quite frequent; they represent the
who has to achieve his or her human purpose in spite of, or with the help
Folktales have many characterizations that make them easier to understand than other
types of literary genre. They are typically considered children’s story in the modern
western world. “Despite their outwardly simple appearance, folktales address theme and
issue that profound significant for all ages" (Eric 15). They touch on many social
wife, leaving home and finding a way in the world, isolation, poverty and failure. They
arrogance, greed, generosity and forgiveness. They are filled with hopes and dream, and
Folktales from different cultures display many uniqueness while some elements
are common to many or all culture. The main point of the tale is precisely the ingenious
way in which a difficulty or danger is overcome, and also underline struggles to find
what is right or the same. Taylor writes “the attitudes characters reflect – pride and
humanity, and greed and generosity – are common to all humanity” (16). The struggle,
joys, and hopes common to humanity addressed in folktales provide a bridge between
culture and its theme. The social, moral and relational themes that lie behind the stories
tend to rise above local cultures. Taylor writes, “Finding a spouse, coming of age,
5
dealing with death and loss, and unexpected bad fortune are common issues in any
culture” (16).
Folktales have been used to teach values in many societies and we often find
characters in folktales that clearly demonstrate particular moral qualities. We find lazy
and hardworking son, the wretch stepmother, the misery man, the wise woman, etc.
There is no subtle character development and subtle working with moods and feeling.
Taylor comments: "Although in real life, life does not always seem fair, in folktales it
usually is the hardworking girl who is badly mistreated will marry the prince in end,
and the wicked, lazy step sister will miss out [. . .]” (ii).
In folktales, the theme is very plain and concrete. It is often guided by the
cultural and religious belief and value of particular group or race. Similarly, the
trickster, the noodle head, the diligent son and wise old woman appear in the tales of
many cultures. They embody abstract qualities like greed, patience, humanity,
arrogance and foolishness. Such abstract qualities are not in themselves simple to
explain but when they represented in a character of folktales, they become much easier
to explain.
Folktales in Nepal are collectively grouped as Dante Katha (literally oral tales).
Now, however, in modern Nepali literature, they have been given the name Lok Katha
(folktales). In Nepal, folktales resemble fairy tales or marchen and fables of western
Nepal has a large number of stories based upon primitive beliefs in animism: the
humanization of animals, natural forces and objects in the universe. Many stories
concerning human values, which are common the world over and follow archetypal
patterns, are also found in Nepal. These tales are strongly affected by the religions of
neighbouring countries. In the foothills of the Himalayan region, the stories are
6
dominated by Tibetan Lamaism, whereas in the South along the Terai, they are centred
on primitive forms of Hinduism. Genuine Nepalese folktales which are in fact a pot
pouri of Hinduism and Buddhism, and whose presentations are unique, original
structures, come from the Kathmandu Valley and the villages of the central zone of
Nepal.
The cultural history of the Terai is fairly new compared to that of the mountains
and valleys. The impenetrable malaria-infested forests of the tropical Terai have lately
the Tharu and Satar who have been greatly influenced by Hinduism, also live there. As
their life depends entirely on agriculture and natural resources, the folktales tell a great
deal about gods and goddesses of fertility, and of the forest and animals. Generally,
these tales are set against a background of superstition, the existence of Heaven and
Hell, the Golden Age and the Iron Age respectively representing the past era of
happiness and the present age of crisis. In the Terai, people do not believe in the germ
theory of disease, believing rather that if a person is sick, it is because an evil spirit has
entered the body. Such primitive characteristics still prevail among indigenous tribes,
While other important ethnic groups such as the Tamang, Limbu and Rai have
enormous influence in the hills of central Nepal, the Kathmandu Valley is a melting pot
of many cultures and religions where unique and original characteristics of Nepalese
life can be detected. The folktales of the Newar community deal with Tantrism (the
Buddhist cult of ecstasy) and superstition, and they are fantasies. The fictional Parbate
Folktales in Nepal do not have a rigid structure or form, and this flexibility
allows for reiteration, monologue, and the use of narrator’s imagination. However,
folktales do have clear beginnings and conclusions, and tales are well-balanced with a
logical conclusion, even though the dialectic may not be visible. A happy ending,
returning the listener to reality, is visible. There are many Nepalese folktales which
dwell upon emotions. Love between man and woman is a very strong motif, and since
polygamy was legal, it was common for a man to have more than one wife. A man is
usually swayed and used by a second wife, who is usually presented as a villain,
indicating that the system was socially undesirable. Although Nepal has a strongly
male-dominated society, in certain tales, women are shown as flirtatious and capable of
dominating men. Wealthy ladies, even queens and princesses, may be portrayed as
nymphomaniacs.
poor people oppressed to very rich people, simpletons contrasted with shrewd
characters, gentle personalities versus cruel and aggressive ones. In these extremes of
treatment, and are often reward for their honesty and innocence. However, useless they
are tricksters; they are not usually presented as dominant victors. The villainous or
stupid personalities of rich people, and especially merchants, are widely caricatured.
These characters are usually shown as ruthless misers and the audience likes to see
them duped.
While the character presentations of male and female personalities are very
detected: male chauvinism is undoubtedly distinct; women are unable to keep secrets; a
step-mother is a jealous villain; the youngest son, daughter or wife becomes the hero or
8
heroine; the relation between a brother and a sister is based on honesty whereas two
sisters may be enemies and a step-daughter is a victor. Most of these motifs correspond
cultural diversity is well-reflected in folklore. There is ample scope for studying the
folktale of Nepal as well as collecting tales from all over the country, fitting them into
scientific and morphological patterns. So, different sorts of intensive and extensive
studies have been carried out for the collection, preservation, interpretation and
They have focused only on the historical, structural, psychological study, and so
on. So, the present research attempts to focus on how the Nepalese folktales portray the
characters that perform their roles on the basis of traditional gender roles in the socio-
cultural structure of Nepalese society. This thesis rests on the fundamental assumption
that gender representation in Nepalese folktales is entirely replete with the ideology of
the prevailing socio-cultural structure that is guided by the patriarchy. However, despite
being the victims of the traditional bias gender stereotypes, the characters are able to
resist the stereotypical roles at times. Gender roles are social constructs, not naturally
veering towards trickster role as a strategy for survival which is proved by the female
advocates equal rights and dignity for women with regard to men. Feminism acquired
a more or less concrete set of beliefs in the nineteenth century articulating the thesis
that women are inherently equal to men in every way conceivable. As a concerted
social and political movement that went global, feminism got momentum in the
twentieth century. The aim of this movement can be designed as spiritual as it seeks to
establish a human society based on the mutual understanding and respect between the
two sexes.
in relation to men, and points the social system controlled and constructed by men, as
the cause behind women’s subordination. It also studies how women’s lives have
changed throughout history. Also, one of its central concern is, to explore how
women’s experience is different from that of men’s, either as a result, as Michel Ryan
historical imprinting and social construction” (101). The guiding norms of patriarchy
to the extent that they make unfounded claims about the inferiority of women are
Basically, viewed from the feminist perspective, folktales as well as fairy tales
are complicit with the masculinist project of keeping women subjected to the men by
inculcating in female readers the conviction that only by remaining under male
protection, only through marriage; they can attain social status and wealth and garner
moral plaudits. As Karen E. Rowe, a feminist scholar, explains, this genre promotes
universal models of female dependency. Referring to such widely read and enjoyed
10
tales as Cinderella, Snow White, and Sleeping Beauty which praise female
subjugation to male power, Rowe writes that they “encourage women to internalize
only aspirations deemed appropriate to our ‘real’ sexual functions within a patriarchy”
(211). To further explain the matter, “by showcasing 'women’ and making them
disappear at the same time, the fairy tale [. . .] transforms us/them into man-made
stereotypes of women despite the claims of some that the tales are dominated by
female protagonists and narrators. The facts remain that the powerful women are
self-destructive at the end. Thus, after setting the premise that folktales and fairy tales
are complicit with the masculinist mission of subjugating the female kind, it is
relevant here to cite a critic in this context. As Donald Haase writes in “Feminist
Fairy-Tale Scholarship,” fairy tales have accrued a variety of response and so it would
The initial and rather simplistic debate over the effects of fairy tales on
“the masses of children in our culture" and “the meaning of fairy tales
In this light, the folktale and fairytale becomes an elastic frame within which
recycling old paradigms or on experimenting with themes, structures and styles in the
ways that de-emphasize male centrality or domination. Thereby, they show that the
A society can be called patriarchal to the extent it valorizes male values at the
cost of female ones and helps perpetuate the domination of women at the hands of
men. This sociological and anthropological meaning retains its relevance in the
contend that patriarchy would refer not simply to a society where men hold power,
but rather to a society ruled by a certain kind of men wielding a certain kind of power.
And such a society reflects the deep-rooted values of traditional male ideal. In this
sense, patriarchy denotes a culture whose central and driving ethos is an embodiment
Patriarchy has determined to considerable and virtually indelible extent the nature and
quality of human societies across the world ─ irrespective of time and space ─ the
values and priorities, and the place and image of women within the societies, and the
aspires to enhancing healthy and just relations between the two sexes, has to expose
how masculinist ideals have been dehumanizing and subordinating women on the
The males know well how easy it is to control women by the mere strategy of
mind control. To inculcate certain beliefs, to indoctrinate the women into believing
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their inherent fragile, sentimental and altruistic nature, to continuously remained them
of their secondary and subservient status ever since the creation of human beings by
God ─ these all are the tools of mind control. To give constancy and currency to such
currency. Stereotypes ─ images based on limited experience of one time but accepted
as true ever after ─ serve the great purpose of the men in subjugating the women. The
stereotypical images of women stamped and circulated as truths have been destructive
to the self image and esteem of women. These myths and stereotypes function as
social norms, and direct the attitudes and conducts of both the males and the females
in the society. Anne Cranny-Francis, Wendy Warning, Pam Stavropoulos and Joan
A stereotype is a political practice that divides the world into like and
generated by those outside the group and (b) are part of a political
What is problematic with the female stereotype is that it forces, rather indoctrinates in
many instances, the women not only to appear and accept that they are substandard,
13
but to become substandard so that they can gain approval of the society as the
embodiment of ideal women. And the social factors help sustain and enhance such an
ideal. Limited education, experience, and critical faculties ─ deemed ideal for women
because they are not expected to be wise in the ways of the world, or to compete with
the men ─ along with the demand that women be of delicate and attractive body to be
desirable for male consumption, and countless other influences collude in the
masculinist mega scheme of persuading the women to believe the myth and act
accordingly. Explaining how much pressure such myths, stereotypes and curbs exert
upon females in twisting and narrowing their intellectual and moral qualities, Mary
Women (1792):
community to that of the minute parts through the private duty of any
not connected with the general good. The mighty business of female
Women are deprived of the right to natural expression of their psychological and
physiological needs and drives. They are expected to live up to the images men have
conjured about them. This all eventually creates a diseased and unnatural personality
in women. The influence of stereotypes and the need to live accordingly destroys the
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humanity in females. This is what Simone de Beauvoir also notes in “Myth and
that are wrong: we are not that Femininity is a false entity, but that the
So, powerful is the myth of femininity that the females are forced into complying with
the myths. Otherwise they would be termed aberrations, but the myths would never be
questioned as to their authenticity. One of the features of the myths produced by men
against women is the praxis of the ‘us’ and ‘them,’ the ‘self’ and the ‘other.’ The men
are the natural component of humanity; whatever they see, say or do is right and
universal. Their mode of acting and thinking is the human mode, the right mode of
thinking; but the female mode of perception is merely of the female. But in reality,
both men and women are of the same category in their nobility and weakness as
human beings. The effort of the men to establish and claim superiority over women is
spurious. Commenting upon the false notion of feminine mystery and the usefulness
We can see now that myth is in large part explained by its usefulness to
man. The myth of women is a luxury. It can appear only man escapes
from the urgent demands of his needs; the more relations are correctly
lived, the less they are idealized [. . .] surely most of the myths had
So, the real issue is not what is true but how much the patriarchal mode of perception
Sheila Ruth makes a similar observation to how women are rendered weak in
Given these odds against their success in life, it is hardly surprising that so few
women came to be counted as successful personages in life which accounts for the
men. How can one expect women to be somebody with their distinct mark in a field
when what the society and family confines the definition of good women to those who
are beautiful and attractive, fragile, domestic and self-effacing ─ that is, ready to
renounce themselves for the integrity of their family and the honour of their
husbands?
Deliberating upon the impact of tales and literature on the psychic make-up of
disenchantment, the formulaic closing with nuptial rites and the plot’s
The masculinist images of women and the roles that these images support are
constructed so as to create a situation many ways very convenient for men. Women
are expected to help and serve men physically, taking care of their homes, property,
women are paid so little or not paid at all; sexually, as wives, mistresses, or prostitutes
who satiate men’s sexual needs; and reproductively, assuring men of their line, the
continuity of dynasty.
support mechanism for the musculinist self-image; the softer, weaker, and more
dependent the woman is, the stronger and more powerful the man appears; the more
servant the woman, the more master the man. Hence, there is the complicity of the
can and cannot be said or done in all everyday life. It is to exclude the females by
showing the reference of subordinate images described from the pre-historic time. It is
talking, thinking, acting and feeling about an idea, issue or areas of concern. It may be
generated and experienced verbally, visually, aurally or is a way of the sign systems
operating within a society. The society under the system possesses some knowledge
and by using such knowledge, the society creates discourses. This discourse consists
This very represented power creates the truth, which ultimately becomes truth to
everyone who is under the system. Arun Gupto says about the discourse and the
power exercised over females creates the truth about them: “Truth is determined by
the power institution like patriarchy exercises over the female. [. . .] Discourse is
Gupto makes clear on the intertwinement of discourse, power and truth. Patriarchy
exercises the power upon female and what it generates through discourses become
Discourse can help us to interpret many slices of social and political systems
that we have never ever considered before. It also helps to illuminate past of the
ordinary world that is controlled by the experts of society. Thus, discourse is a major
point in the society that affects how we can speak, activities and interpret things. The
experts define the situation and then divide the line between reason and unreason for
the society. And it determines for us what is proper and improper through eyes of the
years, decades and according to the one who has the power.
achieve particular social goals rather than representing acts. Likewise, male discourse
is created from the earlier age to subordinate a woman which is not the true
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representation of the women. Since, the males were in power in the earliest age, they
controlled and guided everything as their wish. They created such discourses that
would uplift them as superior and relegated female as inferior. Even the religion is not
left untouched from the male ideology in the sense of female representation.
Most of the fairy tales and folktales are also male discourse in which male
patriarchal ideology creates the binarity of superiority and inferiority between male
and female respectively. Feminists have long been aware that the role of women,
wait patiently to be rescued by a man, and views marriage as the only desirable
reward for right conduct. In most of the fairy tales, a beautiful, sweet young girl is
rescued from a dire situation by a dashing young man who carries her off to marry
him and "live happily ever after". It seems that females must be beautiful, sweet,
admiration. The fairy tales, the male discourse, represent the female character as
'submissive and polite figure' and male as 'rescuer and masculine figure.'
indoctrinate the dominant social standards. Commenting on folktales and fairy tales as
level of civilization, that is, the essential quality of a culture and social
only depended on the tales themselves but also on the manner in which
they have been received, their use and distribution in society. (67)
Ambivalent Representation
contradictions. Sometimes women are extolled for their feminine virtues of modesty,
submission, and tenderness. At other times, they are criticized for being weak,
dependent and sensual. Woman is the sublime, the perfect, the beautiful; she is the
awful, the stupid, and the contemptible. She is, according to the Christian tradition,
the Mother of God as well as the Traitor of the Garden. She is the lovely, tender
creature man marries and takes pride in as well as the treacherous, manipulative sneak
who tricked him into a union he never sought. A woman is supposed to be the keeper
of virtues; she is yet a base and petty creature. Women are thus represented as having
dual natures, of being all that is desirable, fascinating, and wonderful, yet destructive
and dangerous. Ambivalence toward a whole range of real and imagined female
powers expresses itself in subliminal patriarchal beliefs that women are unknowable,
docile but dangerous, caring by preying at times. Sheila Ruth calls this bifurcation of
images, the negatives versus the positives ones the "Mary/Eve dichotomy" (87).
incarnation of evil. It was a woman who caused the primal fall of man: who know
well the Biblical story of Adam’s fall from the Garden of Eden. It was because of
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Eve, his beloved wife, that Adam, though he knew the consequences, took the fatally
adventurous misadventures step of eating the forbidden fruit from the Tree of
Knowledge. In doing so he disobeyed God and incurred the curse of expulsion from
the Garden of Eden, of toilsome life and of death. In short, women are mystified by
the men either because they cannot understand them as they do not try to, or because
the cooked-up mystique of femininity serves the male interest well. It goes without
saying that, in a patriarchate, like everything else, the images of and injections about
women have been exclusively male created. The dichotomy in the representation of
women is a strong indication of the ambivalence on the part of men, because all the
representations are done by men. Beauvoir’s observation in her noted text The Second
Demon, then it is most confusing to find in woman also the muse, the
an intrinsic quality of the Eternal Feminine. The saintly mother has for
correlative the cruel stepmother, the angelic young girl has the
perverse virgin: thus it will be said sometimes that Mother equals Life,
sometimes she equals Death, that very virgin is pure spirit or flesh
This dual representation of woman has kept them at a disadvantaged position. They
can be the good mother or friend only at the cost of their individual identity; and if
they try to be on their own, they are depicted as the very evil incarnate. In patriarchy,
the images of women, like other conceptualizations, have been male created.
Therefore, it takes no extra perception to see that the contradictory and conflicting
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stereotypes of women are male projections, and as such they ought to be understood
as the outward expressions of male attitudes. As Sheila Ruth writes, “the dichotomy
society. They are stereotyped as either good women or bad women. If the woman
accepts her traditional gender role of being gentle, submissive, passive, emotional,
virginal, angelic, etc. and obeys the patriarchal rules, she is a good woman; if she does
not do so, she is a 'bad woman’ who is violent and aggressive. These two roles also
identified woman as ‘Madonna’ and 'whore’ or ‘angel’ and ‘bitch’. These two images
are defined according to the place and the time in which they live. They are
projections of patriarchal male desire. We can see the image of ‘good girl’ and ‘bad
patriarchal culture. To her are attributed all the virtues associated with
sacrificing, and nurturing. She has no needs of her own, for she is
about the problems of others, and she frequently worries about those in
The ‘good girls’ obey the patriarchal norms whereas ‘bad girls’ violate it. The good
girl has to remain uninterested in sexual activity except for the purpose of legitimate
22
desire. The ‘good woman’ is expected to find sex frightening or disgusting. She does
not want her own self autonomy in the society. She only knows about the traditional
rules. But the ‘bad-women’ who are power-seeking always want newness in the
society. They do not limit themselves within the boundary which is drawn by the
patriarchy. They have strong feminist idea and they are hard and bold enough that
Feminist literary critics study ideas about sex and gender expressed by people
in literary and critical media. Their subject matters are mainly – ideas about
sex/gender, people who use these ideas, the effects of these ideas on people, the media
of language, literature, and critiques where these ideas are expressed, our self-
reflective feminist study of subjects, subject matters, methods and epistemologies, just
to mention a few. Feminist study has been defined as the study of the dynamics of
gender definition, inequality, oppression, and change in human societies. It aims at re-
the attributes of many other types. His undertakings are audacious, rebellious,
egotistical and always performed with the idea of giving freedom to personal action in
the face of group restrictions. In the form of small creatures such as Spider or Rabbit, in
the guise of the jesters and fools Stupid Jack and Punchinello, or as Moron and
Hophead, he has performed his antics in the traditional entertainments of most groups
throughout the world: aboriginal, peasant, and urban. He is the central character in
many different types of folk narratives. He may appear in different figures as a mythic
hero like Raven or Coyote among Indian tribes in North America, as a fictional
23
prankster like Br'er, Rabbit or Aunt Nancy (the Spider) in communities of Negroes. At
various times he is clown, fool, jester, fraud, prankster, confidence man medicine man
magician, witch, jokester, initiate, culture hero, even ogre. This contradiction is brought
Trickster is at one and the same time creator and destroyer, giver and
knows neither good nor evil yet he is responsible for both. He possesses
no values, moral or social [. . .] yet through his actions all values come
The devil and the trickster are not the same thing though they have regularly been
confused. The devil is an agent of evil, but trickster is amoral, not immoral.
Trickster's outstanding characteristic is his lack of morals. Paul Radin says that
at all times he is constrained to behave as he does from impulses over which he has no
control. He possesses no values, moral or social, and is at the mercy of his passions and
appetites. The stories about him exist in communities with ethical values; though he
the same time that they are laughed at and admired. As the enemy of constraint, he
disorder and the enemy of boundaries. He represents the principle of pure unbridled
energy directed into human shape and impelled by primal human needs. He not only
actively dupes others but sometimes tricks himself. And when he does so, his exploits
are nothing less than clownish and his mask is that of the noodle, the simpleton. In this
disorder, a catalyst for subversion and loss. He is the border breaker, the
doesn't respect the values that you've set up for yourself, and smashes
So, the pervasiveness of this image in human narrative suggests its centrality as an
The duality of trickster's acts is as most dramatically seen in the stories about
him which were told as a cycle of tales among such American Indian groups as the
Chippewa and the Winnebago. In the celebrated cycle collected by Paul Radin from
who unwittingly commits all kinds of taboo acts leading him to retreat from his group
and his role as a leader. He then goes through a series of close to fifty incidents equally
divided between those in which the tricks others and those in which the duper is duped,
generally by himself.
The trickster functions as a challenge to authority. The trickster tales are almost
universally seen as expressions of rebellion against the rigid taboos and ritual
trickster as:
A challenger of ritual order, like the clowns who try to distract the
participants in the Navago Night Chant. Far from being irrelevant comic
relief, the clowns play a crucial role. By resisting the clowns' attempts to
seen as a norm of sanity; he does not clear our vision, but rather clouds it with hints of
potential chaos. In social terms, his actions are extremely aggressive, destructive, and
forbidden. Therefore, his acts must be countenanced because of some aspect of our
dream world; his actions must represent a way of getting around, taboos and other
restricted restrictions without actually upsetting the order of society. In other words,
trickster functions primarily as a release value for all of the anti-social desires repressed
by the men who tell and listen to his stories. He behaves as the members of the society
would behave if they were not constrained by fear from acting. Vicariously,
sympathetically, through the acts of this egocentric sensualist, man expunges the
pressures that might otherwise destroy both his ordered world and himself.
from the everyday world and put in a ridiculous context so that we may laugh the laugh
powers such as the ability to change shapes or sexes and so is somewhat removed from
the sphere of man. Third, and perhaps most important, he is always represented as a
creature with many human characteristics, but one who lacks exactly those features
story, his conscious mind becomes dissociated from his body and its excrescences and
consequently he commits acts that soil or maim him severely. In different episodes, he
finds himself awash in his own faeces, or burning his anus as punishment, or eating his
26
own intestines. Such stories betray the fascination of trickster with body and its product
destructive.
the injector of disorder and bankruptor of souls. In this connection Melita Schaum
comments: "By breaking the rigid and sterile orders of misplaced human pride,
paradoxically makes possible social and spiritual renewal" (3). He is often shown to be
a lawbreaker; that fact is, however, that he is too minatory, too childlike, and too insane
to conscious of the law. In this regard, it is interesting to look at the beginning of Sam
Blowsnake’s cycle of mythical events. Here trickster appears first as a chief who calls
for a war dance only to frustrate the expectations of the assembled group by cohabiting
with his wife, in direct violation of ritual war procedure. As the incident proceeds, it
becomes clear that the chief has in a very real sense lost his mind, his sense of order,
and has taken on the characteristics of an insane man. He has regressed from his adult
role to one of essential innocence or childishness, and it is in this guise that he is able to
address this issue: tricksters "have an enormous libido without procreative outcome”
tend to “be uncertain sexual status", and to "have exaggerated sexual characteristics
mythology, Loki transforms himself into a mare mates with a giant’s horse, and gives
birth to Sleipnir it-an eight-legged steed that becomes Odin’s royal mount. In Paul
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Radin’s collection of North American Indian trickster tales, the trickster disguises
himself as a woman by fashioning himself a vulva from an elk’s liver ─ but then bears
children to a chief’s son (22 - 23). These gender-blurring abilities of trickster seem to be
a function of their ability to cross all boundaries, rather than of any controlled
of the limen, the margin outside of human order that Victor Turner has described as" the
unbounded the infinite the limitless [. . .] the essentially unstructured which is at once
de-structured and pre-structured " (98). The unbounded or destructed cannot serve as a
thresholds are sites where he is to be found. Tricksters are “edge men” according to an
anthropologist Victor Turner (580). For Hynes "the trickster appears on the edge or just
to those places that are off limits, the trickster seems to dwell in no single place but to
be in continual transit through all realms marginal and liminal" (34 - 35). Trickster,
thus, resides at the junctures between the worlds ─ the known and the unknown, the
orderly and the chaotic, temporal and divine. He is a figure of aporia and transition, he
creates illusion but unveils it; his is the magic that both enchants and disenchants the
This foster the referentiality of language which offers “not one meaning but the
Gates, Jr. writes “trickster is he who dwells at the margins of discourse, even punning,
ever troping, ever embodying the ambiguities of language [. . .] repeating and reversing
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simultaneously as he does in one deft discursive act" (235). Thus, this use of bent
tries to survive the dangers and challenges of the world using trickery and deceit as a
deconstructing the binarity line between truth and falsity. His act is redemptive since
disrupting and disorienting of the order can incarnate new ways of thoughts and new
indeterminacy and duality are his major strategies. Tricksters therefore personify a
hyper consciousness. They are masters of tricky speech and verbal power, but are cut
off both for the non-verbal knowledge that underlies speech and from participation in
long dialogues by means of which social truth is constructed. Hence, he is the most
with the masculinist project of keeping women subjected to the men. Male
chauvinism is undoubtedly distinct. Women are represented in the role of passive and
negative objects. Female agencies are passive since the male’s concerns are
prioritized more than the female. Men always enjoy the position of centre, but women
are sidelined and marginalized in the peripheral section of the society. Though there is
not such natural rule and characteristics to prove hierarchy between men and women,
culturally fabricated normativity of the society from ancient to the present viewed as
the “other” of man’s “self.” Men with their culturally designed mindset presuppose
that they possess rights fundamentally to subjugate women and to make women
subordinate or appendage to men. Male supremacist ideals teach and direct women to
internalize gender-biased assumption that they are of less value and are genuinely
inferior and unequal to men. The definition of woman by men does not value woman
as human being rather they define them as objects and commodities to fulfill
misogynist stereotypes of women have been portrayed. The powerful women are
destructive at the end. In the tale like “The Tale of the Seven Sisters,” the wicked
She was jealous and treated the seven sisters very badly. She also
the father and his daughters, and persuaded him to develop a plan to
banish the seven girls from the house forever. (Sakya and Griffith 182)
The step-mother is represented with negative role. She has a villainous role. She lures
her husband to plot against her daughters. “He hatched a plan to lure them into the
forest and to abandon them there where they would be devoured by wild animals”
(182). He according to his plan takes his daughters to the jungle and let them spend
the night there. “When he arrived home and told his wife that he had abandoned all
his daughters in the thick forest, she was happy and thought that she had got rid of
destructive at the end. She is the victim of male discourse which considers women as
troublesome. She is a greedy woman who wants to acquire more than the precious
offerings brought by her husband so that she visits her step-daughters. They give her a
present of a marikashi (an earthen pot covered by thin rice paper in which there is
know what was inside and ran home at once. Without saying a word to her husband,
she rushes to her room, locked it from inside and opened the marikashi. To her horror,
society, males are given higher importance in comparison to females. The high degree
of male chauvinism can be perceived in the tale entitled, “The Jackal’s Advice.” The
king following the advice of the jackal suppresses his beloved wife. The queen is
excited by the king’s power to understand the language of animals. But the king does
not want to teach her this art. The jackal further says: “Look at me. I control all my
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vixen in the palm of my hand. You are the king, and yet you can not control even one
wife, shame on you!” (191). This inspires the king to have domination over his wife.
He takes his wife as a stupid woman who cares nothing about her husband’s life. She
is like an object to him. He wants to keep her under his control. After listening to
jackal’s advice his male ego gets encouraged. The jackal further advises him: “Tell
your wife that in return for learning this art, you had to receive one hundred sharp
lashes. If she wants to learn it also, she must also receive hundred lashes” (191).
This further encourages his male ego and he is pleased with the jackal’s timely
advice and tells his wife: “Well, if you want to learn it, you must suffer one hundred
lashes as I did, otherwise I can’t teach you” (191). The queen at first agrees with this
condition of the king. The king is the male figure who exercises his male power upon
his wife. He is the agent of male-dominated society so that the male ideology is
manifested in his activities. His wife has become an object to be acted upon. The king
hits her sharply just a couple of times. Her delicate skin lacerates and she screams
with pain. Again the king asks her, “I have given you only five lashes, you must still
receive another ninety five” (191). His mind is entirely drenched with the dominating
mentality fuelled with the masculinity project of keeping women subjected to male
which is well-reflected in this tale. The queen, the female figure, in the tale is very
inquisitive to know the secret of the king’s power to comprehend the languages of
animals. She wants to learn the art herself. The king tries to convince her saying that it
is impossible for him to teach her because if he does so, he will die within the seven
days. This is a sort of discourse that the king has tried to use in order to subjugate his
wife. But the queen is quite stubborn so she insists him to teach her at any rate.
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Because of her insistence, the king finally agrees to teach her as per the advice of the
jackal. According to the advice, she gets a lot of beating from the king. Her inquisitive
gender stereotype constructed within the patriarchal society in which the wife is the
victim of this gender stereotypification. She suffers a lot in the hand of the king.
Patriarchy assumes that women are the objects of showcasing for which they
have to focus on elaborate make-up. Women are objects of external beauty having no
inner beauty. They are the objects to be decorated. They ought to beautify themselves
internalize such false assumption as their strength through which they can draw the
love and protection of males. The young girl in the tale, “The Story of Sinhapata
make-up: “. . . every day she washed with kwolon (a mixture of wheat and barley
made into a paste with water and mustard oil) to remove every trace of dirt from her
face and neck. She put a distinct tika of red vermilion power on her wide forehead,
and dressed on a beautiful sari, as well as adorning herself with jewels” (200).
Patriarchy upholds that the external beauty is the strength of woman. They can
draw the attention of the males towards them through it. It is only a weapon for
garnering love and protection. It is a patriarchal social norm which highly motivates
the young girl to have an elaborate make-up in the story. So after the elaborate make-
up she displays herself sitting at the window with the hope of getting a princely
husband: “She always sat in her window, displaying her beauty to passers-by” (200).
supposed to have got married to a handsome man who can rescue and protect them.
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Men are the protectors and rescuers. This assumption is well-functioning in the
female dependency in the social structure thereby creating the gulf between the
gender roles. Bearing in mind the dependent-mentality, the girl in the tale mentioned
above wants to get married to a dashing man: “She always dreamed of marrying a
fond of flattery of their outer beauty. The young mouse in the above-mentioned tale
stands in front of the girl who is sitting at the window and asks her amorously: “Oh
most beautiful Sinhapata Maiju! Oh, most beautiful Sinhapata Maiju, how are you and
where are you planning to go?” (202). She has internalized the gender-stereotype of
female in patriarchy that women get tempted easily and she gaily replies: “I’m ready
for marriage if some one proposes, I’m ready for a feast if someone invites me” (202).
Her every word bears her submissiveness towards patriarchal order. She is eager to
get someone’s proposal and get married soon. Moreover, she wants to get someone’s
proposal but does not intend to propose someone on her own which precisely
more than one wife. The woman is often presented as a villain. The king in the tale
“Chandra Mukhi in the Land of Impossible Tasks,” has two wives. The woman is
shown involved in treachery which is the common feature of Nepalese folktale as well
as Nepalese society. The first wife hatches a cruel plan of abandoning the second
wife’s child:
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A cruel plan developed in the first wife’s mind. She told the midwife to
abandon the second wife’s son in a box by the river. She sent a
massage to the king that the second wife had given birth to a mussal
(chopping block). The king was sorely grieved, but relieved that he had
at least one son. He was extremely disappointed with his second wife
evil. She is the sublime, the perfect, the beautiful. On the other hand, she is the awful,
the stupid, and the compatible. This ambivalent representation of woman is seen in
the Nepalese folktales like in “The Story of Dhon Cholecha.” The little girl named
Maincha receives a lot of torture from his stepmother. She is the victim of her cruel
Her father remarried and his second wife gave birth to a daughter.
the elder girl, good food but she prepared the best possible food for her
own daughter. The elder daughter had to attend to all the household
duties and also had to graze the family’s nanny-goat, Dhon Cholecha,
The gender bias of patriarchy has been internalized by the step-mother in the story.
She always suspects the activities of the step-daughter: “In spite of all the heavy work
and poor food, Maincha was always healthy and happy. Her step-mother became
curious as to why Maincha was healthier than her own daughter, whom she fed and
pampered so well” (166). The step-daughter has been made involve in domestic
chores. She is limited in domesticity. She has to graze the family’s goats, the whole
35
day. “When Maincha finished her daily routine of household jobs, she would take
beautiful, but can’t speak and can only yelp like a monkey. Her peculiarities are said
to be enormous breasts, and her feet have the heel and toes reversed. The kichikinny
seduces men taking them to a solitary place where he kills them by tickling.
nymphomaniacs whose souls roam the night. The emergence of a kichiknny is said to
village spend most of their time roaming the night in graveyards and cremation
grounds wanting to encounter ghosts, witches and other supernatural beings. “One
night they heard a rumour that there was a kichiknny in another locality [. . .] finally, on
moonlight night, they saw a most beautiful woman standing at the cross-roads next to a
patriarchal ideal prevailing in Nepalese society. The male characters in the tale describe
her with bias gender stereotypes: “She was wearing a shawl thrown around her
shoulders. He saw her pendulous breasts and was scared to death, but did not lose his
faithful to their husband. They are supposed to be dishonest and not to be trusted. Such
values of the patriarchal ideal are well-reflected in Nepalese folktale in which the illicit
relationship between women and animals are portrayed. They are depicted as not
faithful to their husband; sometimes they are portrayed as nymphomaniacs. In the tale,
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“The Wilful Woman,” the man has no faith in any women. He believes that women are
all faithless and they should not be trusted. They are rather treacherous for him. “Over
time, wife had a love with the snake. The husband would be away working all day
while the woman and the snake engaged in their amorous affairs. When the husband
On the other hand, women are shown involved in plotting against the men. They
are supposed to be the destroyers of sweet home. In reality, they are the real home
makers. They are shown more loyal to their animal lovers. They try to get rid of their
husbands. In the above-mentioned tale, the wife wants to get rid of her husband:
One day, the wife and the snake decided to get rid of her husband
forever. The woman told her snake-lover to bite the husband to death.
The husband’s normal routine was to spend hours in his puzaa kotha
worshipping God. The next morning, the snake was waiting curled
ground a beam for the right moment to bite him. All of a sudden, the
husband glanced up and saw the snake about to jump on him. (122)
Daughters in a gendered society are regarded as a few days’ visitors who will leave the
house soon. The cultural emphasis on the marriage of the daughter and her nearly
familial abuse and views marriage as a reward for right conduct. It expects women to
remain within the family boundary getting marriage. In the tale, “The Right Husband,”
the daughter is taken as a few days’ visitor. She is supposed to get married to a
She was the youngest daughter of the family and dearly loved by all.
One day, the merchant’s wife asked her husband and sons to search for a
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suitable match for her ravishing daughter since she was growing as fast
as a rising moon. The father and sons agreed and went off in three
beauty had spread all over the country and so there was no lack of offers
society. The female agencies are passive. The men are active in making decisions. In
the case of marriage, male members of the family and society take prior initiative and
make decisions which are pro-patriarchy. In the tale said above, the responsibility of
making decision about the marriage of the daughter is solely taken by the male
members of the family. The fathers and the sons agree and go off in three different
directions in search of a suitable man. All of them find three handsome men who are all
equally determined to marry the girl. Without discussing it amongst themselves, each
decides on man of their own selection: “They mere all unaware that each had chosen a
husband for the girl. By chance, each brother and the father decided on exactly the same
be loyal and obedient to their parents. Because of this assumption, female agencies
remain passive whereas male agencies become active which leads to the victimization
of women. Moreover, this discourse of the society fosters the male hegemony. In the
above-mentioned tale, both female characters ─ mother and daughter ─ are passive.
“First, the father returned home and told his wife that he had selected a handsome son-
in-law [. . .] the two sons came back home and found everything ready for the
ceremony” (133). The females are happy with whatever the male members of the
family have decided. The mother is not discontent: “The women were glad to hear the
38
news, and set about the necessary arrangement for the marriage ceremony” (133). But
the daughter becomes the victim of male hegemony. She performs the traditional
gender role which supposes girls to be loyal to the decisions made by the male members
of the family. She thinks that to deny the decisions is to go against them and hurt them:
“The girl was most perplexed. She didn’t know which husband to choose as every
selection would hurt her father or brothers who loved her so dearly and who had taken
ideal set in Nepalese society. She is the representative of typical Nepalese daughter who
is devoted and submissive. She further says: “I have no prejudice against any of the
three men. Each one is equally fine and handsome” (135). Instead of choosing one
among the three, she requests them to decide among themselves who will marry her and
who will voluntarily give her up. She does not break the traditional gender roles of an
ideal daughter. Her sticking to the patriarchal ideal ultimately leads her into a state of
quitting her life forever: “Finally the girl could find no way out of this complicated
affair, she jump into a ritual fire which had been prepared of ceremony” (135).
They are stereotyped as incapable to rescue themselves and males are rescuers of
female. Males assume that only their twisted arms and legs and flat chest need to rescue
others and to be rescued. On the other hand, women are shown as being helpless in a
dire situation. In the tale “The King’s Judgment,” the wife of the farmer from Tharu
community becomes helpless after she is taken away by the demon that has turned
A demon that lived in the jungle happened to pass the spot where they
himself into the farmer through the power of his magic. He slowly lifted
up the girl and carried her away. When she awoke after a short distance,
she felt very shy at being carried in the arms of the demon whom she
On the one hand, she is submissive to her family and husband and on the other hand she
is helpless. She is the victim of the dispute between the men. That’s to say, she is victim
A quarrel naturally broke out between the two men each claiming the
woman as his wife. The woman was helpless; whom should she
support? She started to cry bitterly and all the villagers, drawn by the
noise of the argument and the anguished cries of the woman, gathered
around. They were shocked at the unusual sight where no one could
She expresses her helplessness to the king of the cowherds. Moreover, she is rescued by
the cowherds and the villagers. The cowherd asks his friend to grasp the demon by the
neck and challenges him to reveal his true identity: “The demon realized his
foolishness, and as soon as the people’s grip loosened, he disappeared. The boy gave
the beautiful woman to her true husband, who thanked the cowherd profusely for his
remain faithful to her husband despite any obstacles on her life. She should confine
herself within the domestic chores. She has to remain submissive to the ideals set by the
family which is entirely patriarchal by nature that regards woman as the helpers of
males but not as the next side of the same coin. In the tale,” The story of the Bamboo-
40
cutter,” the wife is innocent and submissive and remains faithful to her husband. She
always carries out the domestic activities. She prepares meal for him. She massages her
husband’s tired legs after a hard work. One day, the demon assumes the form of the
bamboo-cutter, the husband of the lady and goes to the house but she becomes ready to
serve him and makes him happy since to make the husband happy is supposed to be the
duty of an ideal wife in patriarchal society: “The innocent wife, on seeing her husband,
went to prepare her meal. As it was already dark, she could not distinguish the actual
She performs the traditional gender roles. She is a good woman for the
patriarchal ideals. She never complains of the household work. All the times, she is
ready to serve her husband: “While preparing the supper, she provided him with his
favourite hookah” (74). She is innocent since she serves everything to the demon in the
same ways as she has been doing to her husband: “The woman having finished her
supper and other household chores came to the room with a small pot of oil, to anoint
his legs. The demon was quite unaware that the wife used to message her husband’s
Violence upon women in various forms is seen far and wide in a gendered
society which is male-centred. Its pervasiveness and prevalence disturbs the social
harmony thereby damaging women’s health, psyche and perception of self. Most of the
women are victims of domestic violence. They are often tortured by their husbands and
other family members. But despite such injustice and discrimination, they are helpless
since women are blamed and made responsible for all the consequences. In this context,
standards. It helps socializing the people in the prevailing culture. In the tale, “The Four
Brothers,” the only female character, the sister of the four brothers, is the victim of male
41
arrogance. The four brothers after consulting the astrologer decides to go to fetch their
sister in order to sacrifice to the gods so that, according to the astrologer, the canal will
be filled with water. All the first three brothers are unable to fetch her but the youngest
is able to do so. After her arrival, she is taken to the site of the canal and asked to get
some flowers from across. She is loyal to her brothers but her brothers, who represent
the male-chauvinist ideal, do not treat her justly. They rather treat her inhumanly. She is
encouraged to go deeper into the water time and again: “Keep on going, keep on going”
(Lall 66). The brothers are so much stuck to their male arrogance.
Moreover, they are guided with the customary practice of sacrificing blood to the
gods. Because of this, they decide to shoot their sister by shooting her with the gun:
“Let Eldest brother's gun graze my head-cloth . . . Let second brother's gun graze my
hair . . . Let third brother’s gun graze my clack” (67). Each brother takes turns to shot at
their sister. They keep on torturing. The third brother takes aim and sends his sister’s
cloak flying away: “He then handled the gun to the youngest brother who did not have
the heart to hurt her in the least. So, he closed his eyes as he took the gun and pulled
trigger, but as ill luck would have it, he hit his sister right in her heart and she was
instantly killed” (67). All the brothers except the youngest brother are overjoyed at the
sight of water in the canal which is filled up immediately after the sister’s death.
Moreover, the brothers display more brutality to their sister: “The brothers decided to
cut their sister’s body and cook the meat and eat it. Eldest brother, therefore, asked the
youngest brother to get some fire-wood while he himself went to make a fire” (68). In
this way, the sister is killed after a lot of torturing. She has been represented in the tale
but her characterization is packed up with the masculinist values and norms.
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The characters in Nepalese folktales perform their traditional gender roles but
they are able to resist at times when they veer towards the trickster role and devise
different strategies for survival in unusual situation. The images of women in patriarchy
submissiveness, fragility and tenderness. The women with these images are considered
as good women but the women going against these images are considered as bad
women. This is a sort of discourse that has been propelled in the patriarchal society
since many years and has been playing a vital role in tagging the female with this series
of negative images, since it equates femininity with submission. Even the female
agencies have generated male discourse in the society and female concerns have been
tricksterism helps the characters of Nepalese folktales blur the traditional gender-based
roles. They are equipped with different strategies in order to survive in the unusual
situations appearing in their social intercourse both indoors and outdoors. Challenging
the male-dominated society, they get beyond the negative stereotypes and become bold,
courageous, capable, resistant assertive, clever ,rational and hard women .They become
bold and courageous characters capable of resisting the patriarchal ideals and norms
irrational and emotional. But sometimes the women in Nepalese folktales assuming the
trickster role challenge this order and subvert the traditional gender-based roles. They
become rebellious against the rigidity of the society. They are law-breakers. The
woman in the tale “The Saga of Tanan-Lata” is a very clever mother who saves her
43
stupid son. She dupes everyone whenever she gets the better opportunity: “The clever
mother quickly slipped the money inside her blouse . . .” (280). She is a cunning mother
who is not submissive to the traditional role but rather she is rebellious since she crosses
She embraces the traits of trickster since she is tricky and crafty. She often
dupes her son, Tanan-Lata: “The credulous Taran-Lata looked hopefully up to the sky
and was soon excitedly picking up sweets, unaware that his mother was throwing them
from the rooftop” (280). She is not an ordinary woman who is passive and docile but
rather she is active, creative and bold. The butcher follows the boy, son of the woman,
to his home and demands the money from his mother. But she dupes him. “The woman
feigned surprise and expressed her complete ignorance of the subject” (280). Moreover,
she looks knowingly at the butcher and says: “You see what stories my son invents.
Now you can see that he also made up the story about the money” (280). The poor
butcher is totally disappointed that he has left his shop to follow such a stupid boy. The
The mother like the trickster functions as the principle of order, a catalyst for
subversion. She is not a stable figure who sticks to the traditional gender norms. In
patriarchal society, women are supposed to be irrational and emotional. But the mother
subverts these long-rooted norms of the society through her crafty activities that make
the female agency active. The rumours about her son’s stupidity and simpleton
behaviour have spread throughout the land and nobody wants to offer their daughter to
him marriage. Though that turns unfortunate ultimately, the mother advises her son
about courtship in order to find a girl on his own. Using her sense of trickery: “she
suggested that he got up before sunrise and went near the public well for a girl to come
by to draw water. She told him to throw a small stone at the girl: if she smiled back, if
44
meant she approved of him” (280). The son does everything according to the advice of
female authority. As a trickster, the mother possesses no values either social or moral
unlike the traditional ideal mother who is supposed to be feeble, submissive, faithful,
mother devises different strategies which are often practised by the trickster in folklore,
in order to save her son who is known for his simpleton behaviour and stupidity. The
situation has turned unusual since Tanan-Lata, the son, has hit the girl on the head with
a big stone and has fell down dead with her mouth left wide open in a grimace of pain.
When she finds the dead body, she gets really angry and yells at her son: “You killed
her. Now I must throw her into the well. Run home quickly or villagers will catch you”
(281). The crafty mother takes the dead woman and buries her in the nearby jungle, first
removing all her jealousy, and then she throws a goat down the well. The famous man,
father of the dead girl, drags Tanan-Lata off to look for his daughter-in-law at the
bottom of the well after he tells him everything about the happening of the day before.
But to his surprise, Tanan-Lata finds the dead body of a goat: “When Tanon-Lata
brought up the body, they saw a dead goat. The father-in-law chastised him for wasting
so much time with the stupid man. Thus, again the clever mother saved her stupid son”
(282). The mother acts as a catalyst. She saves her son from the unusual situation
veering towards trickster role which is the principle of necessary disruption which is a
limited within the domestic chores. But the female in Nepalese folktale mostly in
unusual situation veering towards trickster role subverts this patriarchal ideal. The
wittedness. The father asks his three sons to cut down the mountain. They all relates the
story and the wives of two elder brothers express surprise at how they can cut down the
huge mountain but the youngest son's wife gives the very witty answer and says: "Your
father's expression meant that you should tell stories while you climb so that you
wouldn't be aware of ascending such a high mountain" (173). She proves to be a clever
and witty woman who subverts the long-rooted assumption set by the patriarchal ideal.
She is the liberator of the family. When the cruel king sends his men to cut off
the hands of those who have built the beautiful pagoda even in that land, the smart
daughter-in-law quickly realizes the whole situation and tells them that: "She is not
prepared to deliver such precious hands to the ordinary people and she promises to give
to them only to the king's son" (174). After the arrival of the prince, she takes him to a
room deep in the house and then dashes out, quickly locking him inside. She then sends
message to the king saying: "If you cut off the hand of any of those men, I will cut of
the hands of your son" (174). The king is stunned by the women's cleverness. In order
to save his son, he has no choice but to send the old man and his son back to their home
laden down with rightful reward. The daughter-in-law upholds her part of the bargain
The daughter-in-law plays the role like of a trickster who is the emblem of
displacement and indeterminacy. She is a border breaker since in such society, the
daughter-in-law is supposed to be loyal to her husband and family but in this tale, she
is the rescuer of the family. Because of her smartness, the king sends the old man and
46
his sons back and saves her son. In this sense the daughter in law is the figure of
displacement. Moreover, she is the deceiver, trick player and role-shifter. She
smashes the social rigidity set in terms of gender construction. So, she is not an
ordinary woman who is bound to be feeble but rather she is courageous, crafty and
witty.
break the patriarchal norms that female after the marriage should be the passive recipient
of male chauvinism. In such situation they swerve towards tricksterism and thus become
bold and revolutionary. The daughter-in-law in "How the Clever Wife Outwits the
Cheaters," resists the male arrogance. Her husband believes that a wife is like a slave. She
boldly shouts back at her husband: "What a clumsy man you, and when you haven't learnt
how to earn single penny, and when you can't feed your wife with your own labour, you
have no right to behave like this to me. So, fast go and earn some money to feed me, and
then you can beat with your shoes like a slave" (178). Her every word is replete with
contest the irrational authority. The husband in the above mentioned story represents the
women merely to male desire. He labels women as a slave. It is a sort of male oppression
upon female in patriarchy. So, the daughter-in-law resorts to tricksterism which is a mode
of survival for her. She in doing so subverts the traditional gender role which supposes
one who dwells at the margins of discourse. The daughter-in-law in the tale is the trickster
dwelling at the margin since her husband and the society where she lives in is at the
47
center. So, her husband is the oppressive figure representing the male power. She is
victim of male discourse. But she uses the bent language like the trickster and
manipulates her husband. In doing so, she drags the entire situation under her control.
of social mores and prejudices. The husband is the agent of masculinist project of
relegating women to the lower position: "…the stupid son believed that a wife was like a
slave. He thought that after marriage he would be able to beat his wife often with the
soles of his shoes" (176). The daughter-in-law resists the social conventions internalized
by her husband. She is the critic of such bias social mores and practices. She is not a
submissive and feeble woman who bears all the oppression of the male authority. She
wants to uplift herself from the narrow wall of domesticity. Therefore, she dares to break
and cross the barriers set forth by the prevailing society. She in this sense is the
The patriarchal deal assumes that women are the passive recipients of the male
The female characters in Nepalese folktale veer towards tricksterism in order to break the
hegemony of male discourse. Trickster in true sense not only spoofs and exposes the
institutionalized power but also addresses the limitation of human endeavors, especially
the attempt to impose an order on human nature. In the tale mentioned above, the land
lady of the house where the husband lives in veers towards trickster's role:
While he was having a meal, the old lady showed him a hen under a
basket and claimed that it cooked like a rooster. The old lady proposed a
bet: if it would crow the next morning at four o'clock. If it did, the man
48
would have to agree to become her slave; on the other hand, if it didn't
But the rooster crows powerfully in the early hours of the next morning and the man loses
his bet.
The lady is able to spoofs the long-rooted belief that females are the objects to be
acted upon and are the passive recipients. She blurs the binary of centre and margin with
male at the center and female at the margin. She is able to make male the passive
recipient of female imposition and treatment. She treats the man in the same way as he
assumes that the female ought to be treated like a slave after the marriage: "Since he had
lost the bet, the old lady hung shells from his nose and ears to show that he was now a
slave and put him to work for" (179). She has a revolutionary thought. She is radical as
she strikes the society's norms and mores thereby blurring the traditional gender roles.
dynamics of tricksterism help the female in patriarchal society to defy the long-rooted
presumption about female. The patriarchal firmly believes that men are the rescuers of the
family and the females. But the females in Nepalese folktale at times defy this long-
rooted social construct. In the tale "The Story of The Bamboo-cutter" the woman is bold
courageous and revolutionary: "She was not an ordinary woman. Brave and clever, she
maintained control over herself and planned a way to get of the demon" (Vaidya 75). She
distorts the general long-rooted assumption that females are weak and feeble who are
The tricksterism is strategy for survival in unusual situation since trickster defies
the social rigidity, limitation and expectation which in fact help him to ease the challenges
in hands promptly. So, his distortion of the established norms is not for destruction but
rather for redefining and redrawing the boundary. As a result he is not only a destroyer
49
but also a creator at the same time. He baffles the firmly established belief and
reconfigures the border and order. The female characters in Nepalese folktale veering
towards the role of trickster destroy the traditional assumption about the female that they
are feeble and not able to rescue themselves on their own. But the women in the tale
mentioned above defy this presumption especially of patriarchy and dupes the demon:
"She laid a big pillow in her place close to the demon, sprinkled dried peas from the third
floor to the ground floor and removed floor, a big fire pot was placed burning charcoal"
(75). She is a crafty and cunning woman. She baffles the demon. Thus, she distorts the
The demon is puzzled with the woman's arrangement. He wants to devour the
He pounced on the big pillow by his side thinking it to be the woman. But
instead of the woman's flesh, his teeth closed in on an old tattered pillow.
He had difficulty taking out his teeth entangled in the rags. He fumbled in
the pitch dark and found not one on the bed. The demon realizing that he
was outwitted by woman, flew into rage, and swore that he would devour
The demon tries to escape but he is unable to do so. He becomes the victim of the strategy
devised by the crafty woman: "As he got up and walked, he slipped over the dried peas on
the first floor, too, and crashed again. He got up and went to the ground floor. This time
he fell into the big fire pot and died instantly" (75 - 76).
unveils the duplicity and falsehood of the society. The notion of truth and false is a social
construct. Moreover, trickster transforms the social construction of gender role. The
patriarchal society assumes that females are always in need of favour and rescue from the
50
male. But tricksterism transforms this assumption and demonstrates that female also can
take care of the house and the husband. The woman in the tale above is the rescuer of her
husband since he has been deceived by the demon by imitating a human voice by virtue
of his supernatural power. The falls into a trance and cannot remember anything after the
demon casts a spell. The woman is brave and courageous since she goes to forest and
She found him, much of her delight, deeply sitting in a trance and dazed
with fright. The women guessed that her husband must have seen
bewitched by the spell of the demon, and to destroy the influence, she beat
him with tied end of her black sari .Her husband came back to the house
and narrated the whole story of her adventure with the demon. The
husband thanked and praised his wise for her courage and
resourcefulness. (78)
She disrupts the social construct of the male discourse and refashions the truth.
She as a trickster figure reveals the duplicity and falsehood of the male discourse.
She is not dependent but rather self-reliance since she is able to protect herself on her own
on the one hand. And on the other hand, she is a role model for the females since she
rescues her husband from the critical situation. In this sense she is the redemptive figure
since her acts baffles the demon through the trickery and incarnates new life to her
husband. In doing so, she disrupts the expectations stabilized by the male chauvinism.
Trickster is a guiding force for the feminism since it interrogates the politics of
gender resorting to tricksterism. Trickster stands at the edge or border between order and
chaotic, truth and falsehood. So, the female characters in Nepalese folktale veering
towards trickster roles appear on the edge. It means they are not in single place but in
continued transit. They become a figure of aporia and transition. They become the
51
shadowland between truth and falsity. Therefore, trickster role becomes a site of
disorientation where he subverts the demarcation line between truth and falsity
In patriarchal society females are supposed that they are not able to maintain
secrecy. Moreover, they are considered to be more inquisitive than male counterparts.
The former presupposition has been inculcated in the perception of gender role. Folktale
has been a strong agent of transmitting such conception in Nepalese society. But trickster
role veered by female characters subverts this supposition. The woman in the tale is the
glaring example of such woman: "As she was thinking a plan come to her mind. She
placed her kosa-sandu(a big roofed treasure chest) on the ground floor and managed to
squeeze the huge body of the demon. She then closed the chest and locked it with a big
lock. She kept the incident secret and she was careful not to let any of the neighbours
know about" (76). Thus, trickster has blurred the gender role.
The characters in Nepalese folktale are bound to their traditional gender role
designed in accordance with the social structure. The images of the characters are replete
with binary opposition man with boldness, hardness, resistance, rationality and courage,
and tenderness. They at times veer towards trickster role especially in unusual situation
for survival. In doing so, they devise different strategies which ultimately deconstructs the
IV. Conclusion
This research makes a scathing critique of the false notion of female inferiority
and male valour in terms of gender representation in Nepalese folktales which are replete
with characters adhered to the traditional gender roles based on socio-cultural structure of
Nepalese society that is shaped by the ideology of patriarchy. Being the central point of
Nepalese culture and civilization, the mode of gender representation in Nepalese folktales
is entirely complicit with the patriarchal culture. However, despite being the victims of
the socio-cultural ideology, the characters at times are able to subvert the social
construction of gender roles when they devise different strategies for survival in unusual
dictates of patriarchy in which the images of the characters are replete with the gender-
biased stereotypes so as to justify and sustain the male supremacy. Folktale has been a
strong agent in socialization and politicization so as to inculcate the values and norms of
the patriarchate. Since the male experts create the discourse in the Nepalese society, all
the sides of male are weighty and significant whereas the female has a series of negative
values which is well-portrayed in Nepalese folktales. So, the female agencies are passive
since the male concerns are prioritized more than the female. Men always enjoy the
position of centre, but women are sidelined and marginalized in the peripheral section of
the society.
which women are represented in the roles of passive and negative objects. The powerful
women are usually wicked stepmothers whose assertiveness and independence prove to
be self-destructive at the end. They often have negative and villainous role like plotting
against her family and husband. However, they become the victims of male discourse.
53
Women are depicted as being dangerously inquisitive. They are shown as the object of
showcasing which they believe is a weapon for garnering love and protection from males.
They have to bear the violence, domestic problems and negative stereotypes. They are
various forms in Nepalese society is reflected in folktales. Women even become victims
The hierarchy made between men and women by patriarchal society has
marginalized women from the social position in Nepalese folktale. Their participation in
decision-making activities is almost absent since their agencies are passive. They cannot
make their own decision as what to do and how to live. They are rather manipulated by
the males. The images of feminine vulnerability and male protectiveness can be detected.
Women are stereotyped as incapable to rescue themselves and males are rescuers of
females. They are helpless and are always rescued by the males. They are faithful and
submissive to their family and husbands. They become the victims of familial abuse and
take marriage as a reward. They seem content with what they have. Moreover, they are
incarnation of an evil.
Women are the victims of male supremacy in Nepalese folktale. Their life and
existence is limited to the managing of the domestic chores, cooking and looking after
children and husband. They face alienation and numerous domestic problems. They are
associated to their husband and family by marriage and cannot dissociate themselves and
become self-reliance because they are neither dependant nor can gain any assistance from
the society. Moreover, they have internalized dependent mentality. So, they are
condemned to a life of a slave rather than a free and complete individual. They are
women in Nepalese folktales veering towards trickster role are capable of rebelling
against the rigid restraints of the patriarchate which in fact dramatizes the possibility of
refashioning the truth about the construction of gender in Nepalese society thereby
deconstructing the shadowland between truth and falsehood. They defy the view that
women should serve males, should be passive, docile, and submissive and timid, should
spend their life like sewing, cooking and looking after the husband and children. They
dupe the demon, sometimes even the male counterparts. They rescue their husband from
a critical situation. They are rescuers and liberators of the family. So, they are not merely
Interrogating the politics of gender, it transforms the social construction of gender role
and reconfigures the order and border. The female characters in Nepalese folktales act as
the trickster figures since they offering uncorrupted critique of the social mores and
prejudices that relegate women to the lower position, defy the social rigidity, limitation
All in all, the characters in Nepalese folktale which is one of the key sites for
gender construction are in strict adherence to the ideology of patriarchate. So, the
representation of women correlates with the idea of females as incomplete human beings.
Tricksterism conferring upon them agency, volition, courage, protectiveness and power
for violence, subverts the representation of women in the bulks of literature written in the
folktale genre which undermine female worth and existence by portraying women as
inactive, weak characters. It, thus, is a mode of survival as well as a justifiable response to
oppression.
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