RT Article T1 Bovine Bodies and Foreign Kings: Immunity and Dharma in the Hindu Epics JF History of religions VO 64 IS 4 SP 225 OP 246 A1 Newman, Adam Lee LA English YR 2025 UL https://ixtheo.de/Record/193067614X AB This article explores a brief but rhetorically powerful interaction between Vasiṣṭha and Viśvāmitra found in the two Sanskrit Hindu narratives Mahābhārata and Rāmāyaṇa. The story involves the emission of non-Āryan, non-Brahminical forest-dwelling and foreign groups from the Brahminically pure body of the wish-granting cow (kāmadhenu/surabhī) and explores one possible meaning for this rather perplexing narrative moment. I draw upon the metaphor of biopolitical immunity as explored by Roberto Esposito, particularly in his Immunitas: The Protection and Negation of Life, to help understand the narrative emission of non-Āryan bodies from the body of the wish-granting cow and her destruction of Viśvāmitra’s army. In short, the king Viśvāmitra trespasses into Brahminical space, at which point he is perceived as a threat and becomes, as it were, akin to a contagion. What I suggest in this article is that the wish-granting cow emits non-Āryan groups from her divine body as an immunitary response to the trespassing of Viśvāmitra and his violent army into the domain of the Brahmin. The armies that the wish-granting cow emits are a threat to the Brahminical body politic but are included within the domain of the political body in order to minimize and circumscribe their threat. DO 10.1086/734931