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Music, memory, and feminine gaze in Ranjana Mishra's 'Rāga Gauḍa Sāraṅga'

By Ravi Ranjan* 
Ranjana Mishra's poem "Rāga Gauḍa Sāraṅga" stands as a luminous testament to the possibility of creating what the German composer Richard Wagner termed a Gesamtkunstwerk—a total work of art—within the intimate confines of an Indian domestic courtyard. This remarkable poem weaves together the intricate grammar of Hindustani classical music, the philosophical depth of structuralist thought, and the quiet, affirmative feminism that characterises Mishra's distinctive poetic voice, transforming everyday domestic objects into vessels of transcendent meaning. 
The poem operates on multiple levels simultaneously, each enriching the others to create an experience that is at once deeply personal and universally resonant, firmly rooted in Indian cultural specificity yet capable of entering into meaningful dialogue with the greatest works of world literature.
At the heart of the poem lies Raga Gaud Sarang itself, an afternoon raga known in Indian classical musicology for its crooked gait and playful character, achieved through its distinctive mingling of notes from the Kalyan and Bilaval parent scales. Mishra does not merely invoke the raga as background atmosphere but makes its musical grammar the structuring principle of her poetic vision. 
The poem's imagery mirrors the raga's characteristic movement: just as the notes of Gaud Sarang do not proceed straight but advance by pausing, twisting, and touching previous notes, the reader's journey through the poem follows a similarly meandering path—from dancing fishes to boiling rice, from a drying dhoti to the shade of an old banyan, finally arriving at the traditional bandish that provides the poem's spiritual centre. This wandering is not merely decorative but essential, embodying the raga's fundamental aesthetic principle that truth and beauty reveal themselves through indirection rather than straight paths.
The domestic imagery through which this musical structure manifests is deceptively simple. Old rice dances in a pot, a torn dhoti is spread to dry beneath an old banyan in the courtyard, a tune descends swaying from the stairs of morning, shining like some memory. These images belong to the everyday world of Indian middle-class life, yet Mishra invests them with profound philosophical significance through her subtle handling. The dancing rice, for instance, becomes a symbol of maturity and transformation: as rice ages, it becomes fluffier and more fragrant when cooked, just as experience matures through the heat of life's struggles to produce wisdom and joy. 
The torn dhoti, far from signifying poverty or decay, emerges as an inscription of time itself, bearing witness to all the actions and memories a body has lived through. The old banyan provides shelter not only for the drying cloth but for human sorrows and experiences, drawing them into nature's protective embrace. Through such imagery, Mishra performs a quiet yet profound reclamation of the domestic sphere traditionally associated with women's labour, transforming kitchen pots and courtyard corners into sacred arenas of feminine agency and spiritual alchemy.
This feminist sensibility operates through integration rather than confrontation. Mishra does not reject tradition or protest against patriarchal structures overtly; instead, she reveals the intrinsic value and transformative potential already present within traditionally feminine domains. The woman who tends the boiling pot, who spreads the washed cloth to dry, who moves through the courtyard as afternoon deepens—such a woman emerges as an intuitive custodian of cultural continuity, her everyday actions participating in rhythms as old as civilisation itself. 
The poem's culmination in the bandish "Aja mori amkhiyam palana lagi"—"Come, my eyes have forgotten to blink"—further underscores this vision. This line, drawn from a famous traditional composition in Raga Gaud Sarang, evokes the state between separation and union where anticipation becomes so intense that the eyelids forget their natural function. Mishra uses it not as quotation but as invocation, a call that transforms personal longing into shared cultural memory and positions the feminine gaze as active, creative, and spiritually potent.
Structuralist theory provides a valuable lens for understanding how the poem achieves its remarkable density of meaning. The images function as signifiers whose signified meanings extend far beyond their literal referents: the torn dhoti connotes renunciation, dignity, and familial heritage; the dancing rice embodies the raga's laya or rhythm made visible; the courtyard becomes a space where the distinction between private and public dissolves. The poem operates through a series of dualities—old versus new, stability versus motion, worldliness versus spirituality—that structuralism teaches us to recognise as the fundamental mechanisms through which meaning is generated. 
Yet Mishra does not leave these oppositions in place but works toward their resolution, creating what might be called a static dynamism where the stability of the old banyan and the motion of the descending tune coexist in harmonious tension. The courtyard and the pot become symbols of macrocosm and microcosm respectively, with Raga Gaud Sarang serving as the bridge that connects them, transforming mere space into resonant soundscape.
When we place Mishra's achievement in global context, its significance becomes even more apparent. The poem enters into natural dialogue with T.S. Eliot's exploration of time and music in the Four Quartets, particularly his insight that music heard so deeply ceases to be heard at all and becomes identical with the listener. Mishra's moment when "Gaud Sarang has just called" achieves precisely this state of identification between consciousness and sound. The torn dhoti and old rice find unexpected kinship with the Japanese aesthetic of wabi-sabi, which locates beauty in imperfection and transience, and with Rainer Maria Rilke's conviction that poetry's task is to name ordinary things—house, bridge, fountain, gate, pitcher—and thereby save their existence. 
The poem's treatment of memory as something that shines forth from ordinary objects echoes Marcel Proust's philosophy of involuntary memory, while its exploration of the inseparability of dancer and dance recalls W.B. Yeats's famous question. This global resonance does not dilute the poem's Indianness but rather demonstrates how authentically local art can speak to universal human concerns.

The poem's achievement is perhaps most striking when contrasted with the treatment of domesticity by other feminist poets. Where Sylvia Plath's kitchen becomes a site of visceral alienation and latent violence, where Adrienne Rich's household routines symbolise suffocating patriarchal ideology, Mishra's domestic spaces radiate warmth, continuity, and quiet joy. This is not to suggest that one approach is superior to another—each responds authentically to its particular cultural and historical circumstances—but to highlight the distinctive character of Mishra's integrated feminism. 
Her work suggests that empowerment need not always take the form of rebellion; it can also manifest as the loving affirmation of traditions that, while certainly shaped by patriarchy, have also been shaped by women's creative participation in them across generations. The dancing rice and the torn dhoti become not symbols of oppression but evidence of women's enduring capacity to infuse everyday labour with meaning, beauty, and even ecstasy.
Ultimately, "Rāga Gauḍa Sāraṅga" achieves what the most profound art always achieves: it takes us out of ourselves only to return us to ourselves, transformed. The poem's crooked path through domestic images and musical structures leads finally to that state of unblinking awareness where the duality between self and world, between listener and music, between past and present dissolves. What remains is pure experience—the shining of memory, the calling of the raga, the dance of rice in the pot. In this sense, the poem itself becomes a kind of raga, a temporal art that nevertheless opens onto the timeless. 
It reminds us that the ultimate goal of both music and poetry is to reach that silence where words and notes cease and only awareness remains, that anahata nada or unstruck sound which was before all worlds and will remain after they have passed away. Mishra's poem, grounded in the particularities of Indian domestic life and the classical discipline of Hindustani music, yet reaching toward this universal horizon, fully deserves its place in the ongoing dialogue of world literature.
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*Professor & former Head (Retd.), Department of Hindi, School of Humanities, University of Hyderabad. This is the abridged version of the author's original article 

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