Kanasugalu — Mookajjiya

Mookajjiya Kanasugalu: A Journey into the Dreams of a Silent Grandmother

Having lost her husband early and lived a life of ritualistic isolation, Mookajji develops a strange, almost supernatural power. By touching ancient artifacts—a stone tool, a broken idol, a piece of jewellery—she sees "dreams" (kanasugalu). These are not random fantasies. They are racial memories, the collective unconscious of her ancestors. mookajjiya kanasugalu

Published in 1968, this magnum opus isn't just a novel; it is an encyclopaedia of human evolution disguised as a family drama. The story unfolds in a coastal Tuluva village (Tulunadu) in Karnataka. The central figure is Mookajji —a very old woman who has stopped speaking to the world. But her silence is not emptiness; it is a vessel for wisdom. Mookajjiya Kanasugalu: A Journey into the Dreams of

You will never look at a temple, a stone, or a dream the same way again. Have you read Mookajjiya Kanasugalu? What did you think of Mookajji’s theory of totems? Let me know in the comments below. They are racial memories, the collective unconscious of

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