Re-visiting the Panchatantra : staging ancient folklores for a 21st century audience

This is a study of two scripts; an adaptation titled The Jackal’s Pride and an original play titled Toy Box. The inspiration for both scripts derived from an ancient collection of tales called Panchatantra which consists of children’s stories that are individually accompanied by a moral. Dating back...

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Main Author: Begum, Khatijah
Other Authors: Daniel Keith Jernigan
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/68442
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-684422019-12-10T11:08:19Z Re-visiting the Panchatantra : staging ancient folklores for a 21st century audience Begum, Khatijah Daniel Keith Jernigan School of Humanities and Social Sciences DRNTU::Humanities This is a study of two scripts; an adaptation titled The Jackal’s Pride and an original play titled Toy Box. The inspiration for both scripts derived from an ancient collection of tales called Panchatantra which consists of children’s stories that are individually accompanied by a moral. Dating back to 3rd century BC and written for young readers, the tales were an important vessel for addressing “politics and human behaviour” through anthropomorphism and metaphors (“Panchatantra Fables. Introduction - The Gold Scales" 1). Writing folktales that carry political messages in a format that is easily understood by children highlights an irony that prompted the incorporation of a Child-as-Teacher persona in both script; children are exposed to the consequences of immorality at a young age through stories and yet these fables generally use grown-up characters to shed light on mistakes that adults make. The Child-as-Teacher characters in The Jackal’s Pride and Toy Box (i.e. Wild Dog Pup and Dorothy) are therefore essential in depicting scenarios where it is the child who attempt to teach adults a lesson or reveal a hidden problem. In Eric Christian Haugaard’s words, “We have […]something to give our children- a tool that may make them capable of being better and greater human beings than we are” (“Truth, the Child, and Literature” 302). Hence, by putting the child figure at the foreground, the plays amplify the child’s voice and highlight their importance in a society where their knowledge is undermined by adults. Bachelor of Arts 2016-05-26T02:36:18Z 2016-05-26T02:36:18Z 2016 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/68442 en Nanyang Technological University 51 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Humanities
spellingShingle DRNTU::Humanities
Begum, Khatijah
Re-visiting the Panchatantra : staging ancient folklores for a 21st century audience
description This is a study of two scripts; an adaptation titled The Jackal’s Pride and an original play titled Toy Box. The inspiration for both scripts derived from an ancient collection of tales called Panchatantra which consists of children’s stories that are individually accompanied by a moral. Dating back to 3rd century BC and written for young readers, the tales were an important vessel for addressing “politics and human behaviour” through anthropomorphism and metaphors (“Panchatantra Fables. Introduction - The Gold Scales" 1). Writing folktales that carry political messages in a format that is easily understood by children highlights an irony that prompted the incorporation of a Child-as-Teacher persona in both script; children are exposed to the consequences of immorality at a young age through stories and yet these fables generally use grown-up characters to shed light on mistakes that adults make. The Child-as-Teacher characters in The Jackal’s Pride and Toy Box (i.e. Wild Dog Pup and Dorothy) are therefore essential in depicting scenarios where it is the child who attempt to teach adults a lesson or reveal a hidden problem. In Eric Christian Haugaard’s words, “We have […]something to give our children- a tool that may make them capable of being better and greater human beings than we are” (“Truth, the Child, and Literature” 302). Hence, by putting the child figure at the foreground, the plays amplify the child’s voice and highlight their importance in a society where their knowledge is undermined by adults.
author2 Daniel Keith Jernigan
author_facet Daniel Keith Jernigan
Begum, Khatijah
format Final Year Project
author Begum, Khatijah
author_sort Begum, Khatijah
title Re-visiting the Panchatantra : staging ancient folklores for a 21st century audience
title_short Re-visiting the Panchatantra : staging ancient folklores for a 21st century audience
title_full Re-visiting the Panchatantra : staging ancient folklores for a 21st century audience
title_fullStr Re-visiting the Panchatantra : staging ancient folklores for a 21st century audience
title_full_unstemmed Re-visiting the Panchatantra : staging ancient folklores for a 21st century audience
title_sort re-visiting the panchatantra : staging ancient folklores for a 21st century audience
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/68442
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