The Dreams of Tipu Sultan
Tippuvina Kanasugalu (English: The Dreams of Tipu Sultan) is a 1997[1] Kannada play written by Indian playwright Girish Karnad. The play has been performed many times but different groups around the world but mostly in the subcontinent and mainly in Pakistan and India. The story follows the last days as well as the historic moments in the life of the Ruler of Mysore, Tipu Sultan, through the eyes of an Indian court historian and a British Oriental scholar.
The figure of Tipu Sultan has continued to dominate Indian and British imagination for over two centuries, as attested by the numerous scholarly works, ballads, plays and novels about his tempestuous life and tragic end. What is less well known, however, is that this man, who spent a large part of his life on horseback, maintained a record of his dreams that he concealed from his nearest associates. The Dreams of Tipu Sultan examines the inner life of this warrior, political visionary, and dreamer.
Translations
- Collected Plays: Taledanda, the Fire and the Rain, the Dreams of Tipu Sultan, Flowers and Images: Two Dramatic Monologues: Flowers : Broken Images, Vol. 2. Oxford University Press, USA. 2005. ISBN 0-19-567311-5.
References
- ↑ Abha Shukla Kaushik, "Subaltern Historiography: Girish Karnad’s Dreams of Tipu Sultan", Impressions 4.1 (2010). Accessed 13 September 2014.
The Dreams of Tipu Sultan : https://archive.org/stream/dreamsoftipusult00tipprich#page/n0/mode/2up