Abstract:
What makes the literature of the Guru Granth Sahib a novelized phenomenon is its 
sociological consciousness and secular interpenetration of different and pluralistic thoughts 
and experiences of its contemporary reality. Paradoxically as a scriptural canon, the Guru 
Granth does not lose the secular spirit of dialogue, linguistic and cultural multiplicity and 
contemporization of socio-historical reality. To explore the historical dynamism and the 
interspersing of contemporary social voices, the present study has employed Mikhail 
Bakhtin’s novelistic categories of heteroglossia/polyphony, carnival/laughter and chronotope 
to foreground the contesting sites of socio-ideological mulitiplicity and the historical 
dynamism of the Bhakti period within the Guru Granth Sahib. The introduction explicates the 
general and historical characteristics of the Guru Granth Sahib and Bakhtin’s theoretical 
postulates of heteroglossia/polyphony, carnival/laughter and chronotope by extending these 
novelistic categories as the subsequent and catalystic phenomenon of European literary 
history which ultimately manifests the overlapping phenomenon of socio-cultural struggle of 
people, races, cultures and languages. The introduction outlines the general characteristics of 
novelization and stipulates the objectives of examining  important human voices of the Guru 
Granth Sahib from the dialogic theories of heteroglossia/polyphony, carnival/laughter and 
chronotope. The introduction also explicates the historical profiles of Guru Nanak, Kabir and 
Sant Ravidas and puts forth the various reasons of making particular selections of the bhakti 
personalities as subjects of this study. The second chapter employs the key theoretical 
formulations of Bakhtin like heteroglossia, polyphony and dialogism to interpret and evaluate 
the multivoiced and heteroglot sociality of the Guru Granth Sahib. The chapter aims to 
establish that the bani (voices) of Guru Nanak, Kabir and Sant Ravidas in the Guru Granth is 
socio-ideologically stratified and inheres polyphonic and heteroglot elements within its poetic compositions. The chapter further points out the ideological limitations in Bakhtin’s premises 
on poetic formulations and contends that the poetic discourse of Guru Nanak, Kabir and Sant 
Ravidas in the Guru Granth Sahib is multivoiced and dialogic as against the Bakhtinian 
postulates of dogmatic, monologic and authoritarian nature of poetic genres. The idea of 
chapter three is to foreground the popular overtones of laughter and carnivalesque 
subversions which Bakhtin sees as an indispensable part of all human history where people 
collectively express their consciousness against all normative or dogmatic forms of human 
life. There are plenty of instances in the social discourse of Guru Nanak, Kabir and Sant 
Ravidas where laughter and its ironic double along with its carnivalesque decrowning emerge 
with new connotations and configurations. The public settings and dialogic orientation of 
discourse display the everyday crudities and pettiness of life through humorous and laughing 
images of Guru Nanak, Kabir and Sant Ravidas. Chapter four explicates the Bakhtinian 
analysis of various literary and real chronotopes employed to manifest the historical multi
temporality as part of socio-ideological dynamism of that historical period. The voices and 
writings of Guru Nanak, Kabir and Sant Ravidas contain authentic historical material which 
reflects a contact of particular and personalized spaces necessary to propel the historical 
timeline and its evolving multitemporality. Their journeys, encounters, meetings, 
experiences, participation and dialogic engagement were not personal and private enterprises, 
rather they moved out of their personal zones and entered the social zone by participating and 
externalizing the private everyday world of the people into the public domain of literature and 
real public spaces 
 
 The concluding chapter puts forth the important and productive findings and 
interpretation. The foremost finding of this project is to claim that the Guru Granth Sahib, 
despite being poetic in form, is an anti-canonical and anti-authoritative discourse. Thus Bakhtin’s contention that all poetry is monologic has its basis in Western literature, and is not 
equally applicable to the Indian text of the Guru Granth Sahib. The study comes across 
substantial limitations in Bakhtinian methodology as far as Bakhtin’s postulates on poetic 
formulation and authoritative discourses are concerned. However a study of the Guru Granth 
suggests that not all poetic formulations are formalized or dogmatized language of individual 
poets or singers. Social heteroglossia and subverting ideologies of the Guru Granth stand 
contrary to Bakhtin’s postulates of monologic tone of the authoritative discourse and poetic 
forms. In sum it can be stated that these theoretical models and their analytical applications in 
the bani (discourse) of Guru Nanak, Kabir and Sant Ravidas in the Guru Granth Sahib 
productively contributed in exploring the new dimensions of the Guru Granth Sahib from a 
Bakhtinian perspective.