| Motif Code | Description | Example from Sinhala Tale | |------------|-------------|----------------------------| | L112.2 | Hunchback as wise advisor | “Kubja Gurunnanse” | | D1960 | Transformation of deformed to beautiful | “Kunu Bera Kathawa” | | K1810 | Deceptive use of deformity to gain entry | “Kunu Horu Katha” | | Q2 | Kindness to deformed person rewarded | “Goyam Kema” | | F541.1 | Extraordinary sense of deformed person | “Andha Kiyana Lowa” |
This paper asks: How do Kunuharupa Katha construct the relationship between physical difference and moral character? What social work do these tales perform in a predominantly agricultural, caste-stratified society? And what can they tell us about pre-modern Sinhala understandings of disability, beauty, and justice? Sinhala Kunuharupa Katha
Sinhala folklore, Kunuharupa , disability studies, folk narrative, Sri Lankan culture, subaltern agency 1. Introduction Sri Lanka’s Sinhala oral tradition is exceptionally rich, comprising Jataka tales (birth stories of the Bodhisattva), Pancatantra -derived fables, demon stories ( Yaksha Katha ), and humorous village anecdotes ( Gam Katha ). However, one subgenre has received little scholarly attention: Kunuharupa Katha – literally “stories of deformed/ugly form.” The term kunuharupa combines kuna (defect, flaw) and harupa (form, shape). In colloquial usage, it carries pejorative weight, yet in folk narrative, it becomes a complex signifier. | Motif Code | Description | Example from
| Sinhala Title | English Translation | Deformity | Outcome | |---------------|--------------------|-----------|---------| | Kubja Gurunnanse | The Hunchback Teacher | Hunchback | Becomes royal advisor | | Kunu Bera Kathawa | The Deaf Drummer’s Tale | Deafness | Saves village from invasion | | Kunu Kumari | The Deformed Princess | Twisted spine | Chosen for wisdom over beauty | | Andha Kiyana Lowa | The Blind Man Who Told Worlds | Blindness | Reveals hidden treasure | | Podi Minissu | The Little People | Dwarfism | Defeats giant through trickery | | Ura Kunu Rajjuruwo | The Hunchback King | Severe hunchback | Rules justly, remains hunchback | In colloquial usage, it carries pejorative weight, yet