Sudhir Kakar is widely acclaimed as a psychoanalyst and cultural psychologist, yet his contributions as a novelist remain significantly impactful in understanding modern Indian identity. This paper examines how Kakar’s fictional works — primarily The Ascetic of Desire, Ecstasy, Mira and the Mahatma, The Crimson Throne and The Devil Take Love— articulate the evolving psyche of Indian subjectivity amidst tradition, desire, spirituality, historical legacy, and cultural hybridity. Unlike conventional literary narratives that prioritize social or political realism, Kakar’s fiction integrates psychoanalytic insight with richly textured cultural contexts to explore the construction of identity in post-colonial India. Through close textual analysis, supported by relevant theoretical frameworks from cultural studies and psychoanalysis, this study argues that Kakar’s novels contribute a distinct voice to Indian English literature, shaping discourses of selfhood, belonging, and cultural negotiation. His literary vision captures the psychological tensions inherent in modern Indian experience, offering profound insights into how narratives of the self are continuously negotiated between the personal and the cultural.
Dr. Amit Maruti Bamane (Mon,) studied this question.