LANGUAGE IN INDIA

Strength for Today and Bright Hope for Tomorrow

Volume 10 : 3 March 2010
ISSN 1930-2940

Managing Editor: M. S. Thirumalai, Ph.D.
Editors: B. Mallikarjun, Ph.D.
         Sam Mohanlal, Ph.D.
         B. A. Sharada, Ph.D.
         A. R. Fatihi, Ph.D.
         Lakhan Gusain, Ph.D.
         K. Karunakaran, Ph.D.
         Jennifer Marie Bayer, Ph.D.

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Treatment of City in Nayantara Sahgal's Storm in Chandigarh

Varun Gulati, M.A., M.Phil., Ph.D. (Candidate)


Three Stages

Indian English fiction by women novelists reveals three stages in progress. (1)

i. The early women novelists posed problems through their characters in their fictional work. This led to didacticism, sentimentalism and romanticism.

ii. The second group of women writers forged individual styles and projected a vision that was unique. Three important writers of the group are Kamala Markandaya, Ruth Prawer Jhabvala and Anita Desai.

iii. The third group has given expression to the most recent problems. Feminism, free sex, isolation, alienation, identity-crisis or an individual struggling to be oneself are some of the major concerns of the women novelists today.

Nayantara Sahgal and Modern Sensibility

Nayantara Sahgal is a writer in Indian English fiction with a refined and modern sensibility, and a profound knowledge of the world around her. Her contribution to the Indo-English fiction is great and unique in her precise and scholarly description of the contemporary Indian political scene. Her novels portray the contemporary political realities and the disillusionment of the post-independence era in all concrete world (2).

She tries to dig deep into the human mind by recording the individual responses in a particular situation. This, in particular, can be a situation in which citizens in a country are facing sudden changes in politics. She, undoubtedly, is a woman novelist raising her voice with the 'New Woman'. The central concern of her novels is the suffering caused to woman in the prison-house of loveless marriage and her suffering when she makes a breakaway (3).



This is only the beginning part of the article. PLEASE CLICK HERE TO READ THE ARTICLE IN PRINTER-FRIENDLY VERSION.


The Linguistics of Newspaper Advertising in Nigeria | Women in Advertisements | Case-Assignment Under Government in Modern Literary Arabic | Teaching English as a Foreign Language to Very Young Learners: A Case from Turkey | Association of Self Fashioning and Circumstances in Margaret Atwood's The Blind Assassin | A Moral Lesson, Amoral Lesion - Sharon Pollock's The Komagata Maru Incident | Pariksha: Test by Prem Chand | Treatment of City in Nayantara Sahgal's Storm in Chandigarh | Phrasal Stress in Telugu | Stress Among ELT Teachers: A Study of Performance Evaluation from a Private Secondary School in Haryana | Willa Cather’s Portrayal of the Pioneer Virtues in Alexandra Bergson with Reference to O Pioneers! | Man-Woman Relationship in Nayantara Sahgal's Mistaken Identity | Classroom Management and Quality Control - An Action Research | Hermann Hesse's Siddhartha - A Dualist Spiritual Journey | Impact of Dramatics on Composition Skills of Secondary School English Language Learners in Pakistan | Narrative Technique, Language and Style in R. K. Narayan's Works | Diasporic Crisis of Dual Identity in Jhumpa Lahiri's The Namesake | To Teach or Not to Teach Grammar isn't the Question Any Longer - A Case for Consciousness-Raising Tasks | Cognitive Flexibility in Children with Learning Disability | Coda Deletion in Yemeni Tihami Dialect (YTD)- Autosegmental Analysis | The Enigmatic Maya in Anita Desai's
Cry, The Peacock
| Developing an English Curriculum for a Premedical Program | The Ties of Kinship in Rohinton Mistry's Novels | Indian English: A Linguistic Reality | The Unpredictability of the Sonority of English Words | Women's Representation in Polity: A Need to Enhance Their Participation | Nandhini Oza's Concern for the Tribal Welfare in "The Dam Shall Not Be Built" | A PRINT VERSION OF ALL THE PAPERS OF MARCH 2010 ISSUE IN BOOK FORMAT | HOME PAGE of March 2010 Issue | HOME PAGE | CONTACT EDITOR


Varun Gulati, M.A., M.Phil.
Department of English
S.A. Institute of Management & Technology
Haryana
varun_gulati2020@rediffmail.com

 
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