Barun Sobti’s portrayal of Advay—a character oscillating between cold vengeance and reluctant passion—was pivotal. Sobti’s micro-expressions and restrained physicality created what media scholar Anjana Moti calls “the brooding intensity economy” (Moti, 2017). Shivani Tomar’s Avni matched this with raw physicality. Their off-screen chemistry translated into a dedicated online fandom, #IPKKND2, which produced fan fiction and video edits. However, this fandom was niche, failing to capture the broader saas-bahu (mother-in-law/daughter-in-law) audience that drives TRP ratings in India.
The rushed ending (Episode 234) saw a forced reconciliation without addressing the central ideological conflict—could Avni and Advay coexist as equals? The show abandoned its own thesis, defaulting to a clichéd “happy family” tableau. This betrayed the progressive promise of the first 100 episodes.
One of the show’s most iconic motifs is a piece of yellow fabric (the bande yaar —"tell me, friend") that Avni ties around Advay’s wrist. This object functions as a Lacanian objet petit a —a stand-in for unattainable desire and repressed emotion. The scarf symbolizes a pact of equality (friend to friend) rather than a lover’s token, subverting the sindoor (vermillion) as the traditional signifier of marital possession. iss pyaar ko naam doon 2
Traditional Hindi serials typically feature a powerless naayika (heroine) suffering at the hands of a cruel naayak (hero). IPKKND2 inverted this: Advay kidnaps Avni to use her as bait, but Avni repeatedly escapes, fights back, and even stabs Advay in one scene. This physical parity challenged the audience’s expectations. As argued by sociologist Dr. Ruchi Pandey, “Avni represents the new urban woman, but the television ecosystem was not ready for a heroine who does not cry helplessly” (Pandey, 2016).
Iss Pyaar Ko Naam Doon 2 (IPKKND2) serves as a significant case study in the evolution of Indian television romance. As a spiritual sequel to the highly successful 2011 series, IPKKND2 attempted to subvert the traditional “damsel in distress” trope by introducing a female protagonist who is a skilled martial artist. This paper analyzes the show’s narrative architecture, focusing on the dialectic of dominance and vulnerability between the leads, Avni Singh and Advay Singh Raizada. It further examines the show’s use of visual leitmotifs (e.g., the bande yaar fabric), the premature truncation of its plot due to ratings, and the resulting para-social relationship with its fan base. The paper argues that IPKKND2’s failure was not one of performance or chemistry, but of structural inconsistency between its progressive premise and regressive industry demands. The show abandoned its own thesis, defaulting to
| Episodes | Arc Title | Dominant Trope | Subversion Present? | |----------|-----------|----------------|----------------------| | 1–20 | Mistaken Identity | Romantic farce | Yes (Heroine as kidnapper) | | 21–80 | Revenge & Confrontation | Enemies to lovers | Yes (Physical equality) | | 81–150 | Marriage & Mistrust | Domestic tension | Partial (Emotional stalemate) | | 151–200 | Amnesia & Leap | Regressive suffering | No | | 201–234 | Rushed Resolution | Forced unity | No |
Indian television, gender studies, fan studies, Iss Pyaar Ko Naam Doon 2 , Barun Sobti, serial narrative. a brooding industrialist
The plot follows Avni, a Rajput woman trained in martial arts, who believes she is seeking a man named Shlok. Simultaneously, Advay, a brooding industrialist, seeks revenge against the person who killed his twin brother. The show’s inciting incident—Avni mistakenly identifying Advay as Shlok—creates a high-tension farce.