Azariah PHD Thesis
Azariah PHD Thesis
Azariah PHD Thesis
submitted by
S. Azariah Kirubakaran
Ref.No.20138/Ph.D2/English/P.T./Re-Reg./April 2012
Dr. T. Jayakumar
Associate Professor of English
April 2014
Dr. T. Jayakumar, M.A., M.Phil., B.Ed., Ph.D.
Associate Professor of English
Department of English
Periyar EVR College (Autonomous)
Tiruchirappalli- 620 023.
Certificate
the award of the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in English is his original work, based
on the investigation carried out independently by him during the period of study under
(Dr. T.Jayakumar)
Research Adviser
S. Azariah Kirubakaran
Ph.D. Scholar
Periyar EVR College (Autonomous)
Tiruchirappalli- 620 023.
Declaration
Anand is a record of first hand research work done by me during my course period
between 2006 and 2014, under the guidance of Dr. T. Jayakumar, M.A., M.Phil.,
Periyar EVR College (Autonomous), Tiruchirappalli – 620023 and it has not formed
the basis for any degree, diploma, associateship, fellowship or any other similar title.
Tiruchirappalli
Mulk Raj Anand is one of the best Indian novelists whose span covers over a
disturb the happiness and comfort of human beings. According to him, all people must
have liberty and equality. Anand stresses the need for the emancipation of the ordinary
people from the clutches of untouchability and other social ills. The real humanness lies
in the treatment of all the people with compassion and pity. Anand plays the role of an
downtrodden people. Many individuals face with gross human rights problems such as
torture, hunger, discrimination and the like. As a writer, Anand addresses the social
The study aims to create a link between fiction and human rights principles.
This study is to increase the education of human rights and to improve human rights
practices that are set forth in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights through the
novels of Mulk Raj Anand . The link between the literary art and human rights is
profound touching almost every epoch and every society on earth. Therefore it is high
wishers.
English, Periyar EVR College (Autonomous) Tiruchirappalli for his advice and
and patience to go through my thesis and offer his valuable suggestions. Without his
The good advice, support and friendship of Dr. C. Dhanabal have been
The library facilities and internet facilities of Bishop Heber College have been
College Dr. Jesudoss Manalan for his support and the ambience of our library.
I thank my colleague Mr. Kaviarasu for his timely help and support during the
A special word of thanks to Dr. Krishnan for his direction on the right path.
They have been my emotional strength at all times. They have personally endured my
parents, S. Sathia Samuel and D. Mary Anushoy for their love and unconditional
W. Paul, for encouragement and support in one way or the other to complete the
research successfully.
I register my thanks to Uncle John and Aunt Kala for their loving support.
task.
Certificate
Declaration
Preface
A Note on Documentation
I Introduction 1
Women Rights in The Old Woman and the Cow and Seven
IV 130
Summers
V Conclusion 178
In this process of writing the thesis on the basis of various sources, the
U Untouchable
C Coolie
SS Seven Summers
MF Morning Face
the father of man”. Sartre in his defence of existentialism has said “My atheist
existentialism is rather coherent. It declares that God does not exist, yet there is still
a being in whom existence precedes essence, a being which exists before being
defined by any concept and this being is man or as Heidegger puts it, “human
reality” (Sartre n.p.). This definition of ‘man’ or ‘human reality’ propagates that
man first exists, encounters himself and emerges in the world, to be defined
afterwards. It suggests that it is man who conceives himself, who propels himself
towards existence. Man becomes nothing other than what actually he is and not what
he wants to be. If man is the future of man, he takes the responsibility for himself
i.e. his choices are responsible for all men. The personal responsibility of man is
Man deserves the right to exist as an independent agent of his own destiny.
However, materialism treats men as objects. Though men want to create a human
kingdom of values distinct from the material world, the demands of ‘the collective
power’, hierarchy, dominant society has conclusively shifted from being ‘human’ to
being less than ‘human’. Thus, it is not possible to find in each man the universal
forces the individuals to take responsibility for their actions and to confront the
world on their own terms called as ‘individuality’. The English critic Isaiah Berlin
argues: “I think convincingly, that the cult of individuality that has evolved in the
west since the time of the Enlightenment has engendered totalitarian movements,
2
movements that have harnessed the ‘collective power’ of the individuals against
As a consequence basic human rights have been taken away from men who
or stronger group of the rest of the society for the supposed benefit of the stronger
group or groups of that society concerned. On the other hand, as a result of the
industrial revolution, a few wealthy individuals who start and run a factory or own a
mine deny basic human rights to a large number of people who are employed as
labourers. The concept of human rights clearly enlarges the scope of freedom, but
rights always imply a social dimension because human freedom can unfold only in
relation to fellow men and women. Johnson Glen in Human Rights Theory and
conceptualization:
persons;
independent;
(42 - 43)
These concepts of human rights are based on dissimilar cultural contexts. As A.N.
political civil rights while in most non-western third world traditions the emphasis is
on the community based rights and duties, on economic and social rights and on the
numbers of writers in their books and essays have given contours and contents to the
4
idea of human dignity, equality and the brotherhood of all members of the human
species. Joseph Slaughter in his book Human Rights: The World Novel / Narrative
Form (2007) focuses on recent post-colonial version of novels and shows how the
promise of human rights have become legible in narrative and how the novel and the
consumer capitalism. So, literature in this process not only engages itself with
human-right concepts, their vicarious possibilities, but also paves the way for
therefore, be seen as a potent resource to correlate and study the human right
concepts, as both literature and human Rights become complementary to each other.
rights by Mulk Raj Anand in his novels. The thesis foregrounds the argument that
the individual faces frequently overwhelming power of communities that is, from
preserve some independence. The absence of human rights in the lives of the
outcast, downtrodden, enslaved and untouchables is noticed by Anand and the result
is his much celebrated masterpiece Untouchable. The humanist Anand expects the
British colonialism. It functioned as the dominant political and cultural force in the
country during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Indians use English
language to express their thoughts and present their social milieu. Colonialism is
5
mainly responsible for such writers to voice their anger against the Imperialists.
famous “Minutes”, recommended use of the English language for educating the
Indian masses in order to bridge a communication gap. He felt that English language
was the only suitable medium to transfer technical knowledge and scientific bent of
mind to Indians. His aim was to groom a small section of Indians who could later
use English as a medium of communication and bridge the gap between India and
the western world. In spite of his efforts, for various reasons he could not bring up
admission into any university. Thus the British have set up an education system in
1835 that the Government would prefer the English language only. Sir Charles
Wood, the then Secretary of the State presented a dispatch to the Directors of East
India Company. The Dispatch expressed that education in English as well as Indian
local languages should be enhanced and encouraged throughout the nation. The
Madras and Calcutta. The Universities functioned only through the medium of
arena of literary studies, English began to assert itself. Literary writings in English
ethnicity, class, gender, or by the form of its work. Indians use the English language
Writing in English --a term coined by C.D.Narasimmiah. It has been called “Indo-
Anglian”, “Indo-English” and now “Indian Writing in English”. The term Indo-
Anglian literature for the Indian English writing was coined by J.H. Cousins (1993).
Iyengar, a pioneer in this field. However, Iyengar himself was not comfortable with
At the initial stage, the term ‘Indo-Anglian’ was used to describe original
Commenting on the use of English by the Indians as the medium of writing and
expression, James H. Cousins in his book The Renaissance in India says: “… if they
(Indians) are compelled as an alternative to writing in their own mother tongue, let it
7
Indian English literature, in spite of its diverse cultures, races and religion,
has successfully recaptured and reflected the multi-cultural society. Now, it is a part
popularity, as it covered the entire body of Indian creative writing in English. The
Indian English Writing has since been growing in different dimensions, with the
entry of many Indian writers living within and beyond the geographical boundaries
of India.
Raja Ram Mohan Roy (1774-1833) was the pioneer of Indian Writing in
English. He fought for widow remarriage and voting rights for women. The
Renaissance in modern Indian Literature began with him. He became the bridge
between the east and the west. At a very early age, he mastered many languages. He
was very good at the use of English language. His efforts were dedicated to
regenerate India with political, cultural, educational, and spiritual awakening. The
generally accepted view is that the beginning of Indian English fiction is marked by
Bankim Chandra Chatterjee’s Rajmohan’s Wife (1864). The novel was serialized in
the Indian field in 1864. But it did not appear as a book until 1985. The novel
outlines the challenges of Matangini within rural settings, against her husband
Madhav and her abduction by Mathur. The story ends with her escape and the
retribution of all those who had done injustice to her. Thus, it reveals the long-
suffering of a typical Hindu wife, Matangani and the degradation of moral and social
Bankim Chandra Chatterjee’s only novel in English laid down foundation for
the first generation novelists to record the rich heritage and social transformation in
India. Both the male and female novelists who emphasized their personal and
private experiences followed him. The early novels were, therefore, sketchy,
domestic and aloof to the political occurrences. The early novelists depicted rural
and domestic life filled with superstitions and religious whims with an equal
emphasis on moral and social ills. The women writers wrote about nubile romances,
nuptial bliss and marital maladjustment, and their male counterparts wrote about
social issues.
thematic variety and linguistic maturity. But compared with the recent output, most
early novels in English were almost imitative and faulty. It is assumed that Indian
Novel in English has its roots in the nineteenth century realistic tradition of English
novel. But with the passage of time, the Indian novel in English has become
thoroughly Indian in terms of the themes, techniques and the human values. In this
regard, Meenakshi Mukherjee observes in her book Realism and Reality that
pattern seems to emerge from shared factors like the puranic heritage,
life and many others that affect the form of novel as well as its
content. (viii)
In the early nineteenth century, the poets Henry Derozio and Michael
Madhusudan Dutt were popular. The Bengal writers mainly dominated the period
9
between 1864 and 1900. The famous novelists of this period were Rajlakshmi Debi,
Malabari, N. V. Pai, R.K. Datt, T.C. Mookerjee, A. P. Dutta and others. In the
experimental stage, the western influence was inevitable. But the writers tried their
best to treat contemporary issues. Thus Indian writing in English is a product of the
historical encounter between the two cultures – the Eastern and the Western. The
beginning of the twentieth century saw a gradual growth of the novel form in
English in India. Romesh Chandra Dutt was an important writer of the early period.
The most famous literary figure of this era was Rabindranath Tagore (1861-
1941). He won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1913 for his collection of poems
Gitanjali. He lifted the standard of Indian Literature to the world level and gained
for modern India a place in the world literary history. Sarojini Naidu (1879-1949)
was a great poet whose spirit of romanticism and nationalism charmed the readers.
Aurobindo Gosh (1872-1950) was a poet, for whom poetry was akin to a form of
meditation.
Some other writers of this era include T. Runakvi Shna who wrote Dive for
Death and Swarna Ghoshal who wrote The Fatal Garland, Kirubabhai
Satthianadhan who wrote Kamala, A Story of Hindu Life (1894). Bal Krishna’s The
Love of Kusama (1910), Sir Joginder Singh’s Nasrin (1915), Rajam’s Iyer Vasudeo
Shastri (1905) and A. Maddhavan in Thillai Gobindan (1916) are all historically
society. Indian English fiction reflected the thoughts, feelings and emotion of people
in a rational and interesting manner to reform the society. From its very beginning
10
the Indian English fiction has witnessed socio-cultural, economic and political
In the book Indian Writing in English: Past and Present ,Amar Nath Prasad
consider three successive periods (i) from 1875 to 1920 ,(ii) from 1920 to 1947, and
(iii) from 1947 onwards by the Indian scholars K. R. S. Iyengar (1962), M. K. Naik
(1982) and Meenakshi Mukherjee (1985). Hence the whole corpus of Indian novel
in English may be divided into three broad groups namely, the traditional novel of
The history of Indian English Literature has the most noteworthy event in the
nineteen thirties. It was the appearance on the scene of the major trio Mulk Raj
Anand, R.K. Narayan and Raja Rao. The Big Trio of Indo-English fiction published
their first novels, the first two in 1935 and the third in 1938. They were labelled by
William Walsh in his book Indian Literature in English as “The founding fathers”,
“the genuine novelists”, “the inaugurators of the form” (62). They made their
Swami and Friends by Narayan (1935) and Kanthapura by Raja Rao (1938) and
established the tradition of Indian English Fiction. Indian novel in English around
1930s needed the novelists who could grasp the social scene with an insight into the
human consciousness and who could interpret the real Indian world, distinctive in
writing. It voiced protest against the British Empire. Several political leaders from
11
different parts of the country emerged as literary figures such as Bal Gangadhar
Gandhiji was so much part and parcel of any literary genre of that period that he
made appearance in many dramas, novels, stories and poems. He published the
Experiments with Truth. They are known for his literary flair. The writers
working in different languages in those days were mostly persons who had come
was one of the greatest statesmen of the world. He was also one of the chief
architects of modern India. Apart from being a politician and statesman, Nehru
was a great writer and thinker. His works, such as Letters from a Father to His
Autobiography (1936) and The Discovery of India (1946), bear ample evidence of
his originality of thought and his command over the English language. His prose
style with his choice of the right word, apt phrases, and elegance has earned him a
permanent place among the best known writers in the language. Nehru came under
During this period, the Indian English novelists started focusing their
attention largely on contemporary issues. They presented the social evils like
political and historical concerns. But later in the 1950s a new kind of novel dealing
with contemporary issues appeared on the Indian Literary scene. The psychological
novel depicting the human personality and inner realities of life replaced the realistic
this Indian reality. A number of novelists like Arun Joshi and Anita Desai have
explored the psychological and sociological conflicts in the individual’s life and in
the life of the whole society. Many modern novels deal with man’s alienation from
his self, his class, his society and humanity at large. Unlike 1930s and 1950s, the
1980s marks the significant stage in the growth and development of Indian English
novel and the novels earned great honours and distinction in the western world.
In the recent years, Indian fiction writers have been widely recognized by the
west. Writers like Salmon Rushdie, Vikram Seth, Shashi Tharoor, Amitav Ghosh,
Arundhati Roy, Kiran Desai, Jhumpa Laheri have won prestigious literary prizes.
Indian writing in English has come quite a long way from the mere use of the
English language for the personal gain to the authentic tool for expressing one’s
ideas, thoughts, concepts and imagination. It has not suddenly emerged from
The first phase of writing was romantic and historical, and often it dealt
with India’s political movement for freedom. It reflected the social and educational
reforms of the 1830s in England and the Indian Revolt in 1857. The British people
increasingly viewed Hindu religion and culture with contempt. Therefore Indians
Rabindranath Tagore and Aurobindo Ghose belonged to the early phase of Indian
Writing in English. Towards the end of this phase, the writings became increasingly
13
nationalistic. As M.K. Naik says in The Ironic Vision: A Study of the Fiction of
(29).
The second phase (1920 - 1947) began when the civil disobedience
consciousness was awakened. Themes during this phase include the freedom
struggle, East-West relations, economic problems and communal problems. The trio
Mulk Raj Anand, R.K.Narayan and Raja Rao were the founders of true Indo-English
novel. They portrayed the village life and the concomitant effect of freedom
movement. They could not keep themselves away from the Gandhian Philosophy.
Mulk Raj Anand is the most westernized of the trio. His vast range of themes,
wealth of characters, realism and his treatment of human rights are strong claim.
Raja Rao, one of the Big Three of Indian English Literature, was known for
his distinctive writing style. Though Raja Rao was writing in English and using the
genre of the novel, his roots were in Sanskrit culture. Rao’s work leads to a
India, the spiritual Mother. Raja Rao’s first novel Kanthapura published in the
United States in 1938 is about a village in South India affected by the spirit of
Gandhi. The Serpent and the Rope too was published in the U.S. in 1960. Other
works include a collection of stories written earlier, The Cow of the Barricades, but
published in 1947; The Cat and Shakespeare in 1965; Comrade Kirillov in 1976;
The Chessmaster and His Moves in 1988. A year later, On the Ganga Ghat was
published in India. The Meaning of India was published in 1996. Since then, Rao
has been working on a sequel to this last novel, which has Indian Vedantic
philosophy at its core. Rao’s themes include the metaphysical apprehension of God,
14
the nature of death, immortality, illusion and reality, duality and non-duality, good
and evil, existence and destiny, Karma and Dharma; the quest for self-knowledge,
the place of the guru, the influence of religion on social concepts and patterns;
prejudices on individual and group behaviour; the ideal meaning of love and
marriage; the impact of tradition on the individual and collective life and the
to the rest of the world. The setting for most of Narayan’s stories is the fictional
town of Malgudi. His narratives highlight social context and provide a feel for his
characters drawn from everyday life. His works mainly deal with ordinary people
who can be referred to as ‘the common men and women’ of India. The characters of
his works belong to the Indian middle class. One can herself or himself easily relate
to any one of his characters. The intricacies in the Indian society are also dealt with
in a subtle manner with a touch of humour. His literary output in his long career as a
novelist is quite prolific. Some of his best known works are The Bachelor of Arts,
The Dark Room, The English Teacher, Mr. Sampath, and The Financial Expert,
Waiting for the Mahatma, The Guide, The Man-eater of Malgudi, The Talkative Men
Among the trio, Mulk Raj Anand focuses on the social reality of suppressed
people of India. Mulk Raj Anand is a humanist and a novelist with a purpose. He
writes from his personal experience and the experiences of real people. For Mulk
Raj Anand, the novel is “the creative weapon for attaining humanness – it is the
class life. He follows the ancient Indian tradition of storytelling but his approach to
themes and events is of a social realism. Therefore his novels are the novels of
His social concern drove him to voice his protest against human rights
violation. Mulk Raj Anand was born on 12th December 1905 in Peshawar. His
father, Lal Chand was a coppersmith and soldier. His mother Ishwar Kaur belonged
Amritsar in 1924. He witnessed the bloody reality of colonial rule in the Jallianwalla
movement. He involved himself in the students’ agitation against the British for
which he received eleven stripes on his back and was briefly jailed. This experience
Anand inherited the typical qualities of both his parents. His early life was
lived in the midst of poverty and misfortune. Anand had miserable childhood that
naturally influenced his works and ideology. Anand was born in the Kshatriya
Warrior caste. He had always befriended and played with the children of sweepers.
He had always been disgusted with religious sectarianism, communalism and caste
society and he stood strongly against them. His soldier father had been involved in
the Hindu reform movement, Arya Samaj. But Anand kept his distance, despite its
opposition to child marriage and the prohibition of widow remarriage. And this
movement was also quite evangelical in its attempt to’re-convert’ Muslims. This
Cambridge University for his Ph.D. in 1929. Unlike most Indian students at the
time he had to work in Indian restaurants and later for a publishing firm to earn his
16
money as his family was not in a position to fully finance his studies or
maintenance. He also became part of the literary crowd known as the ‘Bloomsbury
Group’. Here he met writers like T. S. Eliot, Leonard, Virginia Woolf, E. M. Forster,
John Strachey and many others. This literary elite group both impressed him and left
him feeling quite perplexed and uncomfortable. London at that time was the centre
of the English-speaking intellectual world and Anand had hoped to meet with like-
minded individuals who shared his anti-colonial liberal views. Many of these writers
had not visited India and so their impressions were formed by Rudyard Kipling’s
Kim, which to Anand was typical of colonial fantasies of India. It was partly in
London, Anand found himself popular with the literary set. He soon found himself
drawn to the Woolfs and, more importantly, E. M. Forster. Anand held A Passage to
India to be the best fictional writing on his homeland, as this went beyond the
orientalist conceptions of the ‘natives’ and attempted to depict the complex, often
Passage to India, Forster depicts Indian men and women in an unprejudiced way.
Forster did not believe in the superiority of the white race. For these reasons Anand
liked E.M.Forster. Anand had wanted to write about the ordinary, the mundane,
everyday life experiences of Indians who were not kings or gods. His enthusiasm
influence during India’s freedom struggle. William Walsh admires in his book
including Persian Painting (1930), Curries and other Indian Dishes (1932), The
Hindu View of Art (1933), The Indian Theatre (1950), and Seven Little-known Birds
of the Inner Eye (1978). M. K. Naik rightly says in Ironic Vision: “R.K. Narayan is
the novelist of the individual just like as Mulk Raj Anand is the novelist of the social
man” (1).
Anand’s first novel Untouchable was published in 1935. The novel gained
popularity among the western readers. He shows the oppression, injustice and
never-ending experience of violation on human rights. The upper class just exploits
Anand’s second novel Coolie was written within three months and published
in 1936. It is also a masterpiece depicting the reality of life. The novel revolves
round a boy named Munoo, who comes from his village to city centre in order to
come out of his poverty and works at various places. The novel is the story of a
fifteen year old child labourer who dies of tuberculosis. Munoo universally
Two Leaves and a Bud is the third novel which deals with the story of a
coolie, named Ganga. Anand portrays the miserable condition of labourers in the tea
plantation and how they are trapped by the planters. The labourers are suppressed in
the hands of Indians as well as Europeans. This novel makes an aggressive attack on
the dehumanizing effects of imperialism, of capitalist economy and its results such
as exploitation and harassment of helpless labourers. This story takes place in the
luxuriant forests of Assam and reveals the horrid plight of labourers in a tea
18
plantation. The central character, Ganga faced many problems like debt, hunger,
Anand turns to his familiar Punjab villages. His other novels such as The
Village (1939), Across the Black Waters (1940) and The Sword and the Sickle
(1942) were strong protests against social injustices. These three novels give a
picture of the life of a Sikh peasant Lal Singh, covering his boyhood, youth and
early manhood. The story follows the life of Lal Singh from his adolescence through
his experience in World War I, to his home coming and revolutionary activities. It
exposes the destruction of traditional agricultural systems under colonial rule and
the absorption of the agricultural goods and human labour of India into a global
India and acts as a spokesman for the downtrodden. He does not stop there. He
aspires for a new social order that would grant equal opportunity to all.
The Village deals primarily with the oppression of the Indian landholders
over the peasants emphasizing the hanging of Sharm Singh, Lalu’s brother, over the
murder of a landlord that ruined Nihal Singh’s family. Across the Black Waters
account of colonialism and the First World War. In The Sword and the Sickle Lal
returns to Nandpur, marries and becomes active in socialist politics, trying to chart a
new way for the peasants of the Punjab. Anand wrote the trilogy to vindicate his
concern for the peasantry. It is a chronicle of Indian peasantry during the British
colonial rule in India. In the three novels, Anand presents Lalu’s problems in a
completely different way but his portrayal always remains sympathetic. The Punjab
trilogy traces the life of a character searching for another India, an India free from
the coppersmiths of Amritsar who suddenly face a new machine civilization when a
small factory is planted in their midst. In this novel, Anand supports the demand for
industrialization made by the progressive social and political groups in India but he
The Old Woman and the Cow is a unique novel as it is his only novel with a
women question. The novel is a powerful indictment on the brutal rigidity and
authority of the Hindu social ethos that reduce women into hapless victims.
The Road throws light on how Bhikhu struggles to live with dignity. The
Road is set in free India and deals with the issues of untouchability because he finds
no improvement in the life of the rural outcastes even after Independence. The Death
of a Hero is based on the life of a Kashmiri freedom fighter. The novel presents the
last phase of the life of Maqbool who is well educated yet his education does not
A close study of Anand’s life reveals the fact that the seeds of the social
concerns which were to preoccupy him in his novels were sown in his heart in his
works, he makes a fervent appeal to his readers to respect humanity and the equal
and to change. Through his novels, he preaches the principles of fundamental human
expose the distress of the lower castes and classes of India, They are undisguised in
their plea for social change, and are motivated by intense anger and pity” (36).
Anand insists upon the dignity of man – one of the most important
appeal for the practice of compassion in human relations, attaches great significance
to art as a potent instrument for developing whole men and launches an attack on the
fascism. His commitment to humanist philosophy urges him to write ‘of the people,
for the people, and as a man of the people’. His theory of literature derives mainly
from his socialist and humanist preoccupations. He charges the creative writer with
the sacred responsibility of dedicated service to his fellow men through literature.
Elephant and the Lotus: A Study of the Novels of Mulk Raj Anand:
life, a faith which has had all falsity and sentimentality burned
human values is the violation of human rights. Anand uses his art as an effective tool
21
to reform the society. As a writer, he plays a vital role in reconstructing the society.
Anand’s close examination of life springs as much from inquisitiveness as from his
preoccupation with human needs and interests. Anand is deeply pained to see the
raise the untouchables, the peasants, the serfs, the coolies and other suppressed
abjectness, apathy and deep despair to which they have been cruelly condemned. He
always takes sides with the poor folk and depicts their miseries with social anger. So
his novels and short stories become a vehicle of his philosophy of human rights in
the absence of Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR). He has all along
written novels and short stories with a view to teaching men to recognise the
“Dr. Anand in all his novels emphasises the fact that nobility and dignity are not the
monopoly of the rich. The poor have their greatness, honour as well as the rich”
(166). Anand not only establishes that poor are human but also insists that they are
entitled to all the rights as the rich have. As Balaram Gupta observes in Mulk Raj
lastly his advocacy of the cause of the lowly and the lost – all
fact from which we can safely infer that the humanism that
fiction. (44-45)
Anand’s fiction is the expression of truth and explores the facts of the
in A Few Words about this Issue. Contemporary Indian Literature: “He [Anand] is
also a ruthless critic of all that is worn out and decaying – dehumanising and
Verghese also holds that Anand’s heavy emphasis on the didactic quality of art
stands in the way of his attainment as a novelist. He finds this defect in his
proletarian novels.
The Indian society is infested with social ills. Anand is committed to the
of man, his miserable condition, the social forces affecting his happiness. He is
indeed the Maxim Gorky of India. His realization of the responsibilities of the writer
23
as a citizen makes him a committed writer. He takes much care not to distort, falsify
or exaggerate truth.
Emphasizing the revolutionary aspect of art, he stresses the need for a truly
humanist art commensurate with the needs of time. Anand is an artist with a vision
of a new humanity. He has portrayed the longing of the oppressed for freedom from
the violation of human rights. He envisages the self-assertion of the toiling masses
as one of the ways of ensuring their fundamental right for self-dignity. Therefore,
Mulk Raj Anand, R. K. Narayan and Raja Rao are celebrated pioneers of
Indian English fiction. Anand has won a place in history as a political activist,
apostle of peace and social reformer. The career of Anand synchronized with the
most turbulent phase in the history of Modern India. It was a period of trials and
tribulations, colonial rule and postcolonial struggle, social awakening and cultural
of the age as it impressed a creative mind sharing the protests and anguish, the hopes
and fears, the sorrows and joys of his generation. He was a member of all the three
national Akademies of India established for the promotion of Fine Arts Sahithya
founders of the widely admired art magazine MARG, he had been its editor for over
four decades.
Human beings are born equal in dignity and rights. Human Rights are rights
and freedom that belong to all individuals regardless of their nationality and
treatment for all people and leaves behind positive legacies for future generations to
24
practice. It is said that “Man is a social animal”. In the natural world of plants and
animals, it seems that most species live independently. Humans spend their time
roaming the lands, drinking from springs and streams, eating fruits, vegetables, any
insects, birds and or fish they can catch. This wandering life and exchange of goods
such as bands and gained their subsistence from gathering plants and hunting
animals. They were no longer masters of their own lives, but part of a community in
which they had their own rights and duties. Individuals had to learn to keep
promises and to obey orders in the society. Thus there is implied a hierarchical
Thus, awareness of the rights of the human beings gradually evolved over hundreds
of years. Human rights have been defined by Nickel in Making Sense of Human
Rights:
who can invoke them, that they are of high priority, and that
rights are frequently held to be universal in the sense that all people
have and should enjoy them, and to be independent in the sense that
25
is endowed with lofty values makes progress. On the other hand, a society which has
individuals for social development. In every sphere, the relevant virtues must be
practised. Problems arise when different values are indiscriminately mixed up. The
values of dignity and equality of the members of human race, and other basic
principles which are called human rights, can be found in virtually every culture,
religion and tradition. So ‘the natural law’ prevails in society and it is accepted by
the society. But discrimination continues to exist due to ignorance, prejudice and
erroneous doctrines by which certain groups try to justify inequality. Such doctrines
are used to defend slavery and discrimination on the grounds of sex, race, colour,
descent, national or ethnic origin or religious belief, or on the basis of class or caste
systems, throughout history and unfortunately they are here still in modern times.
form of inequality in which individuals are owned by others as their property. The
slaves have no rights. These slaves were brought and sold in the slave market.
Socially the slaves were despised. The basis of slavery is always economic.
Therefore different cultures have emerged; they have brought forward a set of
26
humanistic values. In order to reach this ideal state what is needed is to grant each
person a space to develop freely. Freedom and equality, equal rights, equal
possessions, are the goal of man’s striving, the attainment of which will eradicate
Literature is a part of the growth of civilization. All literary works show the
various aspects of society such as politics, economics and culture. Thus literature
mirrors the ups and downs of society. Literature is the only aspect of life that
embodies the collective experience of the people. It documents man’s struggles and
victories of the past and it inspires readers to protect the individual rights. However
the expressions of personal ideas have long been oppressed throughout history. As
works of literature have become available, the ideologies and beliefs of people have
slowly evolved. The study of Literature is the study of man’s struggles and
aspirations.
in 1637, and later amplified in his Meditations on First Philosophy. So humans are
forced to think to react upon the atrocities against them. Wordsworth has always
been considered a poet dedicated to the cause of freedom. The concept of freedom
though admirably expressed and fought for in generations past, past be re-expressed
the thoughts of one generation to the next. A search through literature for the
concept of freedom is most useful in that it provides characters whose thoughts can
fundamentals: (i) the right of nature and (ii) the law of nature. The right of nature is
the right each man has to preserve his own life. The law of nature is a general rule
discovered by reason which forbids man to violate the preservation of his life. The
most basic right of all is one that we are born with the right to self-ownership. All
legitimate human rights emerge out of this. If we own ourselves, we obviously have
the right to life, and to live as we please. Our thoughts and speech belong to us--
thus, the right to free speech. Our labour, and the fruits of our labour, belong to us--
Laws are partly formed for the sake of good men, in order to instruct
them how they may live on friendly terms with one another, and
partly for the sake of those who refuse to be instructed, whose spirit
transformed into written forms such as Magna Carta (1215), the Petition of Rights
(1628), and the Bill of Rights (1689). The Magna Carta is signed in June 1215
between the barons of Medieval England and King John at Runnymede near
Windsor Castle. “Magna Carta” in Latin and means “Great Charter”. The Magna
Carta is one of the most important documents of Medieval England. The document
is a series of written promises between the king and his subjects that he, the king,
would govern England and deal with its people according to the customs of feudal
law. Magna Carta is an attempt by the barons to stop a king - in this case King John
– from abusing his power with the people of England. Magna Carta promised laws
that were good and fair. It states that everyone shall have access to courts and that
28
costs and money should not be an issue if someone wanted to take a problem to the
law courts. It also states that no freeman will be imprisoned or punished without first
to the continued existence of the human race. A large number of people in many
countries lived under the control of tyrants, having no recourse but war to relieve
often intolerable living conditions. Unless a way was found to relieve the lot of these
people, they could revolt and create war. So representatives from the majority of
governments in the world came to the conclusion that basic human rights must be
protected, not only for the sake of the individuals and countries involved but to
safeguard the human race. The government alone cannot safeguard human rights. It
requires international guarantee after the First World War. The Second World War
brought about massive abuse of human life and dignity and attempts were made to
destroy entire groups of people because of their race, religion and nationality. Until
the Second World War, several countries had proclaimed declarations concerning
human rights (e.g. Bill of Rights, Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the
Citizen, etc.) but no universal declaration has been made. The reflections of the
Second World War atrocities highlighted the need for a universal declaration.
Consequently, two years after the creation of United Nation (UN) the UN’s
and Social Council’s, who delegated the task to the Commission on Human Rights.
John Peters Humphrey, the director of the UN Human Rights Division, was
assigned to produce a first draft. While he conducted the background reading and
law) contributed by writing the preamble and structuring the draft according to civil
29
law practice. Charles Malik, and P. C. Chang worked to ensure that the document
would be acceptable across the world’s religions and cultures. Other main
contributors were Jacques Maritain and Eleanor Roosevelt. The final draft was
Cultural Affairs. After numerous meetings and amendments it was finally approved
on 10th December 1948 at Palais de Chaillot in Paris. The document was named
Rights:
They are the rights that one has simply because one is human.
people enjoy all their human rights, let alone enjoy them
In English language, ‘right’ has two senses: one is moral and the other is
political or legal. In the moral sense, right refers to what it is ‘right’ to do from a
moral perspective: for instance, to assert that it is wrong to steal, is to assert, in part,
30
reason. The second sense of the word refers to a relationship between right and duty
or obligation in the context of the law. In this second sense, the meaning of right is
stronger than in the former, in that a right holder can compel a duty bearer to honour
that right by calling on the court to compel respect for the right.
The rights which are enshrined in the Constitution are called ‘Fundamental
Rights’. These rights ensure the fullest physical, mental and moral development of
every citizen. They include those basic freedoms and conditions which alone can
make life worth living. Fundamental Rights generate a feeling of security amongst
legitimacy’ for the rule of the majority. No democracy can function in the absence
fair play. They serve as a check on the government. Various social, religious,
In Indian Constitution, Fundamental Rights are enumerated in Part III from Article
14 to 32. Indian Constitution does not permit the legislature and the executive to
curb these rights either by law or by an executive order. The Supreme Court or the
High Courts can set aside any law that is found to be infringing or abridging the
foreigners, for example, the Right to Equality before Law and Right to Freedom of
Religion are enjoyed by both i.e. citizens as well as foreigners. The Fundamental
Rights though justifiable are not absolute. The Constitution empowers the
However, the Right to Property was removed from the list of Fundamental Rights by
the 44th Amendment Act of the Constitution in the year 1976. Since then, it has
been made a legal right. There are now six Fundamental Rights. They are
Recently, the 86th Amendment Act, the Right to Education has been included in the
list of Fundamental Rights as part of the Right to Freedom by adding Article 21(A).
With the concept of Fundamental Rights, the Rights are divided as follows:
the First generation consists of civil and political rights and derives primarily from
the seventeenth and eighteenth-century political theories which are associated with
the English, American, and French revolutions. They mainly focused on life, liberty,
and the pursuit of happiness. The rights set forth in Articles 2-21 of the Universal
slavery; freedom from torture and from cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment;
freedom from arbitrary arrest and detention; the right to a fair and public trial;
economic, social and cultural rights. They are called security- oriented as they
provide for social, economic and cultural security. This view originates primarily
32
from the socialist traditions of Marx and Lenin. According to this view, rights are
conceived more in positive rather than negative terms, and thus encourage the
intervention of the state. Illustrative of these rights are Articles 22-27 of the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights. They include the right to social security;
the right to work; the right to a standard of living adequate for the health and well-
The Third Generation human rights are concerned with the rights of groups
and people, rather than of individuals. They are not universally accepted in the
international community as such. These views are a product of the rise and decline
of the nation-state in the last half of the twentieth century. These rights have been
championed by the Third World and remain somewhat controversial and debated.
The specific rights include the right to political, economic, social, and cultural self-
determination; the right to economic and social development; and the right to
participate in and benefit from the common heritage of mankind. The use of the term
‘generation’ was never meant to imply any distinct historical difference or hierarchy
of one generation over another. This is largely due to interrelatedness of all human
rights.
To understand the basis and potential application of human rights, it has been
categorized into moral rights and legal rights. Human Rights originate as moral
rights and their legitimacy is necessarily dependent upon the legitimacy of the
concept of moral rights. Moral rights refer to an individual’s acts according to his or
her conscience – to do a right thing or commit a crime. Legal rights refer to all those
rights found within existing legal codes. A legal right is a right that enjoys the
recognition and protection of the law. The development of the idea of human rights
in India is examined with reference to the major religious traditions, and the
33
argued that the demand for civil and political rights, first raised by the Western
educated elite, grew as a response to changes in the political system during the
British rule, and was incorporated in the nationalist ideology, championed by the
Congress party. The first human rights organization, established in 1936, became a
model for various organizations that were formed in the post-independent period.
Political developments towards the end of the 1960s and early 1970s gave rise to a
set of organizations with limited agendas. After the period of National Emergency
This is the fundamental belief upon which the work of Amnesty International, an
The word ‘Human Rights’ was brought into usage in 1766 by America in
Human
Jawaharlal Nehru and Tagore was the leader. Even the fight for
11. In 1937 – Muthuramalinga Devar for the Tribes towards the Act
Overview)
enough as disparities in economic, social and cultural areas have reduced a large
number of citizens to the margins of human existence. Thus all rights whether
be effectively exercised by anyone. The commission has been making efforts to re-
Human rights provide rights relating to life, liberty, equality and dignity of
1. Equality
community or sex
- As per law one should not lose his life or personal liberty
6. One should not be kept under remand for over three months
Indian Government to safeguard human rights. The Commission was formed with a
Chairperson and four members from Supreme Court and High Courts. The
Commission has a wide mandate including political rights, economic, social and
cultural rights, and group rights. The Commission has got the power to intervene in
before a court, with the approval of such Courts. States are authorised to establish
36
their own Commission to protect the Human Rights Act. It consists of a Chairperson
who is the Chief Justice of a High Court in India. Two members who are justices of
District Magistrate Courts and who have wide knowledge of human rights. Like
National Commission even the State Commission takes up the complaints when
there is a prima facie evidence, makes inquiries and takes necessary steps to resolve
the problems.
Some of the major issues in the history of India were redressed as a result of
their husbands.
was passed.
Hindu women.
basic
37
took place.
1985-86 - The Shah Bano case, where the Supreme Court recognized
country.
to food.
and promotion of human rights. It came into existence in October, 1993. Every year
International Human Rights Day is observed on 10th of December across the world.
Human rights are always natural. So these need to be protected for peaceful
existence of human life. So, there is a need for celebrating Human Rights Day.
The civil and democratic rights movement in India, with its very obvious
India. From a largely limited activist base from the emergency period of the 1970s,
it has since moved into newer areas with newer sources of support especially among
more marginalised sections. But the movement, unlike its counterpart in the West,
The emergence of newer identities and shifting quality of these identities shaped by
the very nature of politics and electoral processes in India coupled with the paucity
rights. The movement has to formulate its own responses, make its own theoretical
Many people renowned in the field of literature have been contributing to the
notion and understanding of human Rights through the ages. Plato believed in
universal truth and virtue. The main focus of the arguments presented in The
Republic seeks to determine the nature of the just life. As an idealistic philosopher
39
Plato begins The Republic by addressing the major theme of his entire work: should
man be just or unjust? To discuss this issue, Plato uses a variety of surrounding
characters to give their opinions. Yet he proves each of them wrong in turn. Later,
he decides that an answer to the above question can be better found if he first defines
the word justice. Aristotle is generally regarded as one of the most influential
ancient thinkers. His Politics is intended to guide rulers and statesmen, reflecting the
high political circles in which he moved. Wordsworth has always been considered a
poet dedicated to the cause of freedom. In his famous essay, In Defence of Poetry,
Percy Bysshe Shelley penned his famous line, “Poets are the unacknowledged
legislators of the world.” They have the gift of being able to express in a few words
Anand is called the Dickens of India. Dickens is renowned for his portrayal
factory owners; he also portrays the brutal living conditions of the masses. Like
Dickens, Anand is a novelist of the lower, and the downtrodden whose rights are
denied by the society. Anand deals with the ills and inequalities of Indian society.
Both Anand and Dickens insist upon the human values of the society. They celebrate
Literature has been the great promoter of a culture of human rights. Fiction
level, creating empathy in a reader’s mind for social changes. Its capacity for
movement towards a more peaceful and humane world has begun with those who
imagined the possibilities. The ideas of human rights are introduced to bring themes
Huckleberry Finn, the French novel by Victor Hugo’s Les Misérables, A.A. Milne’s
The Ugly Duckling, or Anne Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl all have elements of
human rights within their storylines. Set in Burundi, The True Sources of the Nile by
Sarah Stone discusses issues of tribal loyalty following the genocide in Rwanda.
Cry, the Beloved Country by Allan Baton deals with apartheid in South Africa. Mulk
Raj Anand’s Untouchables focuses on the Indian caste system. In the Time of the
Butterflies, a historical novel, Julia Alvarez, the author deals with dictatorship and
that the emancipatory claim to equal freedom that underlies human rights does not
incompatible with some traditional practices such as child marriage, the persecution
different way, human rights can reshape communities and societies critically in
Anand is very special in the history of Indian English literature. Following is the list
of a few research works done on Anand. Social Realism in Select Novels of Mulk Raj
Anand, U. R. Anantha Murthy and Arundhati Roy: A Study (2013) by Rama Rao
Kasi, It studies the novels of Mulk Raj Anand, U.R. Anantha Murthy and Arundhati
Roy in general and the theme of Social Realism. It also deals with the contemporary
Relationships in the Novels of Mulk Raj Anand, R. K. Narayan and Raja Rao: A
female sexuality, power and family relationships in the fiction of Anand, Narayan
41
and Rao. Liberation Motif in Select Novels of Mulk Raj Anand and Chlnua Achebe:
Search for a New Paradigm in Terms of Relevant Third World Fictional Strategies
(2010) by Leo Antony Tagore, This study aims at investigating the fictional writings
of Mulk Raj Anand and Chinua Achebe from the perspective of social justice and
liberation
The list of other research follows: The Fiction of Mulk Raj Anand: A Study
Hunger and Exploitation in the Novels of Mulk Raj Anand, Bhabani Bhattacharaya
in the Novels of Mulk Raj Anand, R. K. Narayan, Amitav Ghosh & Upamanyu
Rohintan Mistry and Mulk Raj Anand (2008) by Nikita U. Mishra, The Construction
of Self in Selected Novels of Mulk Raj Anand, R. K. Narayan, and Raja Rao (1996)
by Uppinder Mehan. After having read a few books and articles on Anand, the
present researcher made a choice to study the novels of Anand and the principles of
human rights in his novels. Though many researchers have studied other aspects of
discrimination, not much has been done on the violation of human rights. His novels
are an excellent medium for reviving the principles of human rights. The present
work not only deals with treatment of human rights in his novels but also applies the
The universal character of human rights is based on the belief that human
rights are natural attributes of human beings. The abstract idea of inherent existence
of rights in all human beings is the key reason why human rights are possessed by
42
all people, and thus their universality. Human rights therefore cannot be seen as
valid only in certain contexts. Their validity is derived from the very source of their
human rights:
people.
minorities (44-45).
societies in the Indian culture in the novels the Mulk Raj Anand is the main aim of
the present researcher. Thus, there are reasons to rethink that novels do relate to the
Universal issues with Human Rights. The focus of this thesis is on how human
rights are treated in the community and how it is totally absent in some
communities.
The aim of the present research work is to study select novels of Mulk Raj
Anand in the light of human rights. It further aims at examining the child rights,
labour rights and women rights. The study endeavours to propagate and spread the
awareness of human rights. So the researcher has introduced the concepts of human
rights and how it is intertwined with literature in the first chapter. The first chapter
43
traces the history of ‘Indian English Literature’ with reference to Mulk Raj Anand’s
The second chapter investigates the two novels of Mulk Raj Anand
Untouchable and Coolie to document the treatment of child rights by the dominant
education, sports and entertainment by his father Bakha who always forces him to
labour and the dominant society who denies him sweets and any relationship with
their children. In Coolie, the plight of a fifteen year old boy, Munoo a child labourer
is pictured.
The third chapter focuses on the denied ‘Labour Rights’ in the novels Two
Leaves and a Bud and The Big Heart. These novels are the records of Anand’s
concern for the labourers and how they are treated with contempt. The novels reveal
the absence of human rights in labourers’ community. The protagonists feel that
industrialization in India is not their enemy but the masters of those industries are
their real enemies. The masters of the dominant society forget the human rights of
The fourth chapter deals with how human rights are denied to the excluded
group like women. This is disclosed by examining the novels The Old Woman and
the Cow and Seven Summers. The post-colonial women in India do not enjoy any
perfect equality with man. Though the constitution of India has done away with all
the differences based on religion, race or sex, women suffer under several
oppressive forces. So Anand who is very familiar with the feelings of women and
how they are trampled by society pleads for their recognition and acceptance.
44
The treatment of the universal human rights and how they are attacked by the
hierarchy of society and also within the society is to be focused in the fourth coming
chapter. The fifth chapter, besides summing up the findings of the previous ones,
presents some solutions for ending the human rights violations. This chapter also
provides some scope for further research on either human rights or on the novels of
particularly interesting when examined in the context of the human rights. Human
nature and thus human rights cannot be understood merely by logic. Literature
illuminates human nature and existence in its fullness – either with or without its
logic. Therefore it has a crucial role in understanding humanity and consequently the
principles of moral propriety defined in human rights. Anand believes that art and
passion as a humanist:
During 1930 to 1940, poverty, slavery and the inhuman exploitation of the masses
were at the peak. It was Gandhi who had waged a war against the forces behind
46
these evils. The novel describes a single day in the life of the protagonist Bakha, a
scavenger boy. The entire action takes place within a period of less than twenty four
hours. Though the scene takes place in a small, interior town of the Punjab,
Bulandshehar, with an outcaste colony and in the streets of the small town the
Mulk Raj Anand’s second novel Coolie was written in three months and was
published without much difficulty in 1936, within a year after the publication of
Untouchable. It moves from hills to plain, village to city from the north to the west
and again to the north. Anand shows that exploitation in all its varied nuances is the
same everywhere. It is not religion, race or caste but only cash and class that matter.
In exploiting the poor, all join hands. Munoo, a naïve hill boy of hardly fourteen is
compelled to move from one place to another against his will--just for his survival.
His father dies of the feudal exploitation, and his mother of poverty and hunger. The
orphan faces domestic exploitation at the hands of his uncle and aunt. They find
their nephew, fourteen year old boy, bold enough not only to earn his own living but
also to support his uncle, who works as a chaprasi in one of the banks in the town.
They send him to work as a servant in a middle class family in a small town where
he is exploited by the wife of his master. She treats him like an animal and other
such entertaining acts in the role of a monkey he bites the daughter of his master,
Nathoo Ram. The master considers it as a sexual assault on his daughter and beats
him mercilessly. Munoo can no longer bear the cruelty and slips out of the house.
Munoo later works as a coolie not only to earn his living but also to help his master.
As a result of the strenuous work his health deteriorates. The disease turns out to be
47
tuberculosis. Despite all the possible treatments, one day, he dies on the lap of his
friend.
‘caste’ is taken by ‘class’. Anand explores the stresses and strains generated in the
Indian society as the result of the commercial capitalistic forces from Europe. They
Untouchable he deals with the Indian problem but in Coolie he takes into
of Untouchable and Coolie in Mulk Raj Anand’s Untouchable and Coolie and this
The fact remains that both Bakha and Munoo are helpless labourers
man. Can art fully address the moral problem of human slavery,
indignity and suffering? I further argue that Anand elevates the level to
a moral essay on humanism where act is concerned with the truth of the
Untouchable and Coolie. Children are an integral part of society. Therefore, they
deserve the childhood rights as it is their born human right. UN convention on the
rights of the child has ensured that every child in the world has right to survival,
development, protection, and participation. This ensures the right to protection from
48
every sort of exploitation and harm. Children are regarded as a source of hope and
the third world countries, where a majority of children are living and working in the
most difficult circumstances. Children in this part of the world are not only
exploitation and abuses and ultimately, they live a painful life. Child labour is the
state where children are physically, economically and socially exploited and abused.
and national laws set minimum age for different kinds of work. But such laws have
been violated everywhere. The way in which child workers are treated is often
children from poverty and humiliation due to the political and social system. The
novels Untouchable and Coolie bring us closer to the violation of child rights.
Children are not always in the Human Rights agenda. They have not been
parents. Early ideas of children’s rights put emphasis on their need for special
protection.
as: “Motherhood and Children are entitled to special care and assistance. All
children whether born in or out of wedlock shall enjoy the same social protection”
(Article 25 Paragraph 2). Other declarations and covenants have also recorded this
concern. During the twentieth century, universal concern for childhood has grown
alongside the ideas of human rights. Human rights are today understood more in the
form of the individual civil rights within a nation state than with the universal truths
49
of brotherhood and humanity. Thus, the concern for children which initially started
as part of the concern for the future of individual nation states has grown over the
boundaries of the nation states and becomes a universal concern. This will be further
borne out while going through the whole process of evolution of the Convention on
It is commonly held that all children are born free and equal -- a child is
conceived and born in a social context. Hence, the prevalent social conditions have
their effect on the child’s rights from the birth and may be even earlier. Every child
that is born is a link in the civilization. This link always has continuity with the past
and it can also muster the powers to break with the past within certain limits. Rights
of the child become relevant within the social context of here and now but also in
It is in this context that various steps are being taken for the protection of the
interests of the child. In this regard the most significant one is “Declaration of
Geneva” which was promulgated in 1924 by the “Save the Children Fund
International Union”. This declaration puts forward five basic principles of child
welfare and protection. The League of Nations endorsed this declaration in the same
year. There was a devastating Second World War after which the U. N. O. was set
up on 24th October 1945. The Declaration of Geneva was further revised and
extended in 1948 and in 1959 by the U. N. The Declaration on the Rights of the
Child was adopted unanimously by the General Assembly of the United Nations on
Rights are an integral part of this declaration. But as the situation of children is
50
specific, protection of the rights of the children calls for a specific international
The UN Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC 1989) is the most
complete human rights treaty. It sets forth a wide range of provisions that encompass
civil rights and freedoms, family environment, basic health and welfare, education,
leisure and cultural activities and special protection measures. The UN CRC
emphasizes that children are holders of rights and their rights cover all aspects of
their lives. It applies to all human beings under the age of eighteen. The Convention
a new vision of the child. Children are neither the property of their parents nor are
they helpless objects of charity. They are human beings and are the subjects of their
own rights. The Convention offers a vision of the child as an individual and a
his or her age and stage of development. Recognizing children’s rights in this way
Children are innocent, trusting and full of hope. Their childhood should be
happy and loving. They mature gradually as they gain new experiences. But in
reality the situation is altogether different. Children have been abused and exploited.
They suffer from hunger and homelessness; work in harmful conditions; there is
high infant mortality; and health care is deficient; and opportunities for basic
education are lacking. Children should have the right to be protected to survive,
develop, and participate in decisions that impact on their lives. Girls should be given
the same opportunities as boys. All children should have the same rights and should
The Charter of Child Rights (CRC) is built on the principle that “All children
are born with fundamental freedoms and all human beings have some inherent
rights”. The Charter confers the following basic rights on all the children across the
world: The Right to Survival – to life, health, nutrition, name and nationality. The
the constitutional provisions for adequate services to children, both before and after
birth and through the period of growth to ensure their full physical, mental and
social development. Accordingly, the government takes action to review the national
and state legislation and brings it in line with the provisions of the Convention. It
Summit, the Department of Women and Child Development under the Ministry of
Children. Most of the recommendations of the World Summit Action Plan are
reflected in India’s National Plan of Action keeping in mind the needs, rights and
the human rights practices. His work was published thirteen years before the
52
Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Anand is the first Indian novelist to have
depicted the stigma of untouchability which isolates man from the rest of his own
society. This novel portrays an individual’s struggle to release himself from the
customs and beliefs of the community he belongs to. However, the individual, a
victim of his traditional Hindu culture, fails to do so. The novel’s emphasis is on an
lives of the millions of untouchables through a single person” (qtd. in Rajan 102).
untouchable caste. The novel deals with a day in the life of Bakha an unclean
outcaste of the society -- a sweeper boy in a small town in Punjab. Bakha is a victim
of the caste-ridden society. The novel focuses on his inner as well as his outer world.
Anand narrates a series of the events from dawn to dusk. As a child Anand had
played with the children of the sweepers attached to the regiment in which his father
was employed. The sufferings of Bakha, brother Rakha and sister Sohini are the
The novel epitomizes the outcaste colony, how their squalid routine starts,
and what it is like living in mud-walled hovels. The author gives a vivid picture of
the scene:
ran near the lane, once with crystal clear water, now soiled by
the dirt and filth of the public latrines situated about it, the
The description of the outcaste colony brings out the sub-human level of the
demeaning and personally painful crises. The first page of the novel pinpoints the
social structure in which such inhuman treatment of an individual is a fact. But for
Bakha, the place where “. . . the ramparts of human and animal refuse that lay on
the outskirts of this little colony, and the ugliness, the squalor and the misery that lay
within it, made it an uncongenial place to live in” (U 9). Anand is a strong believer
in the dignity of man and equality of all men. Like all the true social reformers,
Anand too is aware of the fundamental rights of the children, particularly the
right to survival and development; and views of the child. Article 27 states Parties
recognize the right of every child to a standard of living adequate for the child’s
physical, mental, spiritual, moral and social development. But the condition of
Bakha is far from the ideal. As a child, Bakha starts his work early in the morning
and cleans the rows of latrines. By noon he completes the fourth round. As Anand
describes:
(U 12)
Bakha has many human qualities. He looks upon work as worship and does
all his dull, drab, dreary and dirty work with deep devotion to keep society clean, but
the high-caste people look down upon him as unclean, untouchable and keep him at
an arm’s distance. He is debarred from all social intercourses and the consolations of
religion. He has no right to enter the precincts of the temple, even a coin he offers to
buy a thing is polluted and a high caste Hindu has to sprinkle holy water on it before
touching it. This supercilious attitude of the so called high caste people has a
pernicious effect on Bakha. He suffers from a sense of inferiority which warps his
personality. Anand finds no justification for this hollow pretension of the high caste
people to superiority over the large section of the so called untouchable children.
The novel presents a realistic picture of the miseries and woes of the
violence simply because of the caste into which they were born. The caste system
education, and general social interaction -- divisions that are reinforced through
economic boycotts and physical violence. Dalits are forced to perform tasks deemed
scavengers to clear human waste from dry pit latrines, often with their bare hands
55
bottom of the caste hierarchy and are treated as untouchables even by other Dalits.
discrimination in their schools, where they are forced to perform cleaning and
education and often causes them to drop out of school altogether. The Indian
Act 1989, provides that any person who is not a member of a scheduled caste or
Tribe to do ‘beggar’ or other similar forms of forced or bonded labour other than
punished with imprisonment and a fine. The same Act Section 3(1) (vi) prohibits a
basis of caste and that India is obliged to prevent, prohibit, and eliminate such
discrimination - Section 3(1) (x). Many of the children were being treated as
and at mealtimes, exclusion from school ceremonies, and being forced to use
There are many children under the age of fourteen working like Bakha.
Bakha’s duty is to clean three rows of public latrines. Some common causes of
child labour are poverty, parental illiteracy, ignorance and lack of education. In
India, the practice of family is in children to inculcate the family’s traditional skills.
56
Parents are forced to send little children to do hazardous jobs in order to feed the
Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC) recognises the right of all children to
with the child’s education, or to be harmful to the child’s health or physical, mental,
accompany their parents to work and work with them, or labour on their own in
dangerous jobs such as sanitation and disposal of animals. In addition, many of the
children report that teachers or community members require them to clean toilets or
pit latrines.
members deny Dalit children their equal right to health by forcing them into
hazardous work that includes cleaning human excrement and disposing of dead
exist at all levels of education, from primary education to university. The high rates
of illiteracy and drop-out among Dalits are due to a number of social and physical
factors. Legislation on the area is limited, and measures that have been taken are
often inadequate and usually not strictly implemented. In addition, Dalit children
face discriminatory attitudes from fellow students and the community as a whole, in
particular from higher caste members who perceive education for Dalits as a threat
57
conceptions of dignity which only makes the rich, the powerful and the greatly
belongs to some superior race, religion or colour. A potentially creative person even
equally treated. Thus Anand emphasizes the need for a reverent attitude towards all,
even the untouchable children in society. Anand goes to the lowest dregs of
humanity in search of his character and in his first novel Untouchable makes a
His sensitivity makes it possible for Anand to retain Bakha as the character
whose consciousness records and reacts to the experience. The author expresses how
the right to education (CRC: Article 28) is violated by mentioning Bakha’s inability
to go to school and his impulse for paying a boy an anna per lesson as he is always
One could talk to the Sahibs. One wouldn’t have to run to the scribe
groups are not discriminated against and prevented from pursuing and completing
58
elementary education on any grounds. International treaties also protect the right to
understand other people’s likes and dislikes develops in this age. Bakha dreams to
with blankets; eating eggs, drinking tea and wine into mugs;
Bakha comes before the reader as the symbol of all the suppressed urges of the
human frame. The vigour he applies to his work brings self-effacement to his
existence:
(U 21)
In order to supplement the family income, the children work hard and beg food from
the upper caste people. The meal the upper class people give is also frugal and the
children are ill nourished. He gets very little and comes home broken-hearted. As
the day rolls down his cup of misery fills to overflowing. Still he takes all as it
comes. After his work, he goes with his basket out, begging for bits of chapatis:
The characters in Untouchable bring out the miserable plight of the children,
a neglected section of society. Bakha’s brother, Rakha, symbolizes the unclean life
of the untouchables. Anand calls him “a true child of the out-caste colony which is
so very dirty and unhygienic” (U 11). His father is incapable of any revolt for the
rights of his children. Centuries of dependence have rendered him tame and docile.
He does not have in him a fire for self-respect and dignity which burns in Bakha’s
heart. A picture of helplessness, he knows that he has neither strength nor the means
to protest. He is indeed a typical oppressed untouchable father. His son Rakha also
passively accepts his lot, without ever dreaming of changing it. He is a true
blamed. Centuries of injustice have warped his personality and made him a novice
prove that all the caste Hindus are not bad and devoid of pity. Some of them are
noble and considerate .To substantiate the sympathy and nobility in some caste-
60
Hindus, Anand gives an incident: once Bakha was critically ill, almost on the death-
he could not enter Hakim’s clinic. So he stood outside praying with folded hands to
several persons why he had come there to consult the doctor. He requested them to
inform Hakim of the critical illness of his son. But nobody paid heed to his
entreaties. A little later, growing restless, he went inside, thereby breaking the
convention. After delivering some mild reprimands, the good-hearted Hakim went to
Lakha’s cottage to save the child from the jaws of death. This episode serves a two-
fold purpose. On the one hand, it shows the callousness and cruelty of the majority
of the high caste people and on the other, the large heartedness of one of them. This
sole instance of sympathetic attitude indicates that the time is not far away when the
sweeper coming” (U 59). In the Indian caste system, there are four castes in Hindu
society and each caste has assigned duties, responsibilities and privileges. The
Brahmins are the learned, the Kshatriyas the warriors, the Vaishyas the traders, and
the Sudras supposed to perform menial tasks and physical labour. Brahmins are on
the highest rung of the ladder of social hierarchy, and Sudras are on the lowest. For
thousands of years the relations amongst the castes and their sub-castes have been
governed by religious and moral laws. The most influential of them is a compilation
called Manu Dharma Sastra or Manu Smriti, believed to have been written around
The Manu Smriti states that the first part of a Brahmin’s name should denote
something auspicious, that a Kshatriya’s name should be connected with power, and
61
the Vaishya’s name should denote wealth. The first part of a Sudra’s name should
express something contemptible and the second part should denote service and
humility, because of the Sudra’s low origin. According to Hindu practice, only the
upper caste have the right to study the Vedas. The upper caste alone have the right to
termed twice-born. If the Sudra intentionally listens to or memorise the Vedas, his
ears should be filled with molten lead and lac; if he utters the Vedas, then his tongue
should be cut off, if he has mastered the Veda his body should be cut to pieces
(Cheutharassery 73) .
In the 1500s, during the rule of the Marathas and the Peshawas in today’s
Maharastra state, ‘untouchables’ were not allowed within the gates of the capital city
Poona. The reason was that during this time their bodies were likely to cast long
shadows, with the attendant danger that the shadow of an ‘untouchable’ might fall
on a Brahmin and pollute him. An ‘untouchable’ had to carry an earthen pot around
his neck so his spittle may not pollute the earth. In Maharashtra an ‘untouchable’
wore a black thread either around his neck or on his wrist for ready identification,
Vol.xii, 175)
communities’. One theory is that the warrior-like Aryans came in from Central Asia
through Iran and that they conquered the more peaceful and better settled indigenous
prohibited by the caste system were considered untouchable. Since the Aryans were
62
fair skinned and the Dravidians were dark skinned, the Varna system -- or system of
Concepts of purity and pollution have had a role to play: a washer man
handles items polluted by blood or human waste; a leatherworker works with animal
skins; a weaver creates cloth; a person cremates or buries the dead; a manual
punishment, and fisher folk in some parts of the country are all considered
untouchable. Some ‘untouchables’ eat beef, others eat rats and snakes -- a dietary
habit considered disgusting by the rest of the population. Under the untouchability
system certain religious and social disabilities are imposed on the members of the
untouchable; they cannot enter the temple of the upper and middle castes. In some
parts of India, the members of the untouchable community cannot enter the temples
of the other lower castes. As a result, most of the untouchable castes have their own
temples. Many untouchable castes have their own gods and goddesses. A member
of the untouchable caste cannot be allowed to take water from a well being used by
the members of the upper and middle castes. The members of untouchable castes
must not live or even walk in the streets where the upper and middle castes live. The
members of the untouchable castes are not allowed to sit equally with the members
of the upper and middle caste in the village restaurants. Inter-caste marriages are
The high-brow woman heaps abuses on poor Bakha for having defiled the
wooden platform outside her house. “May the vessel of your life never float in the
sea of existence. May you perish and die! You have defiled my house: Go! Get up!
Eater of your masters!” (U 78). However, another woman hands him a ‘chapati’,
63
saying kindly, “My child, you should not sit on people’s door-steps like this”
(U 130).
One day he goes to meet the good Havildar Charat Singh who presents him
with a hockey stick. Yet he could not play with him. Bakha wanted to help as he had
slipped on the ground and was bleeding. He should not ‘pollute’ a boy. With sunken
heart he goes away from the scene; he was not a son born to man, but to an outcaste.
The outcastes are always at the mercy of Brahmins. Even for an essential
commodity like water, the outcaste should depend on the mercy of the upper class
people. But Bakha’s worst ignominy is yet to come when he goes to the town to
clean the streets. He is insulted and beaten in the market place by a Hindu Lalla
whom by chance Bakha happens to touch. Anand’s focus is to show the irrationality
touch:
Why don’t you call, you swine, and announce your approach!
picture of the ‘touched’ man, and his own helplessness to strike the Ialla back
puzzles him. Very soon a realization dawns on him: “It is only the Hindus and the
(U 57).
announce his approach: ‘posh, posh’ sweeper coming! (U 59). Anand is piling
incident upon incident as if to hammer his point. Bakha is again disturbed by the
temple priest’s shouting “polluted! Polluted! Polluted!” (U 66). This same priest had
tried to molest Sohini when her cry for help invited the attention of the people. He
tries to create a scene saying that he has been “defiled by contact” (U 68). This has
finally killed Bakha inside. He is incapacitated by his culture against which he wants
From this point onwards, Bakha’s spiritual agony centres around his phobia
But Bakha hesitated and did not hold his hands out.
The process of his alienation from his own milieu reaches a climax when his own
father pushes him outside his house. But before Bakha finishes his journey, he is
made to have three encounters one with Col. Hutchinson of the Salvation Army, the
second with Gandhi, and the third with a poet-editor Iqbal Nath Sarashar.
65
the narrator of the novel offered by these three persons. The first one is provided by
The second method suggested is the Gandhian approach and its concomitant belief
that untouchability is the greatest evil of Hinduism. The third one is proposed by
Iqbal Nath Sarshar the poet. He believes that if the ‘untouchable’ sweepers give up
their traditional calling and go in search of other jobs, the discrimination against
them will end. Hutchinson’s words create more confusion to Bakha. He cannot
perceive himself as a sinner. Bakha, as the narrator of the novel reports that he is
afraid of embracing any religion in order to escape from the untouchability. He feels
that conversion to another religion will not solve the social ills. Anand seems to
suggest another solution that refers to the efforts being made by the Christian
missionaries through their local Salvation Army, the head of which is one Col.
Hutchinson. According to him, Christianity and Christ stand for equality of all
the sake of equality. Article 19 of the Convention on the Rights of the Child requires
to take:
of parent(s), legal guardian(s) or any other person who has the care of
Child Rights are fundamental freedom and the inherent rights of all human
beings below the age of eighteen. These rights apply to every child, irrespective of
66
the child’s, parent’s / legal guardian’s race, colour, sex, creed or other status.
Through Bakha, Anand tries to bring a change in bringing up the children in the
Bakha knows that English clothes alone would not make a gentleman of him.
He must learn English and educate himself. ‘How nice it must be to be able to read
and write!’ (U 6). Bakha has this burning desire. But his father makes him realize
the bitter fact that schools are not meant for untouchables. No school would admit
him. His strong and sincere yearning for education, makes him devise a way to
overcome the difficulty. Finding that his self-education cannot proceed beyond the
alphabet, he persuades Bara Babu’s sons to teach him. He would pay an anna per
lesson. It is a pity that his dream of receiving education does not come true.
Uneducated Bakha shows love for learning, passion for education – a dim awareness
the use of violence. Any form of school discipline should take into
While Anand deals with the gap between the high castes and the
untouchables, in Untouchable he delineates the widening gap between the haves and
haves-not. The class conscious society is shown more complex and monstrous than
the caste ridden society. In the former the novelist explores religious, sexual and
domestic exploitation and in the latter, he investigates into the feudal, capitalistic
and Coolie” says that the theme of both the novels is the same. As he observes:
old orphaned hill boy at the hands of exploiters. They exhibit their greed and
mercilessly devastate Munoo’s childhood innocence and zest for life. He moves
from place to place in search of livelihood. At fourteen, he starts from the Kangra
hills in search of a new life. The exodus of the village population to urban centres in
search of a living is a major aspect of the modern Indian experience. The novel
has to move on from place to place: as a domestic servant in an urban middle class
family in Sham Nagar; as a worker in a small pickle factory ; as a coolie fighting for
work in the city market in Daulatpur; as a labourer in a cotton mill in Bombay; and
The importance of the childhood and boyhood is well known. These years
are a time when the brain develops. The experiences and relationships a child has,
along with nutrition and health, can actually affect this enormously. Positive
experiences such as neglect and abuse, on the other hand, affect brain development
in more harmful ways, and contribute to abnormality and behavioural problems later
in life.
Coolie contains Anand’s fervent plea for the abolition of child labour and
class system. The focal point in all the phases is the innocence of Munoo. Anand’s
prime concern is the issue of innocent children suffering in an immoral world. The
Universal Declaration of Human Rights has pointed out that childhood is entitled to
special care and assistance. The society should afford the growth and well-being of
Coolie opens with the social evils of child labour. Munoo lives in a village
with his uncle and aunt because his father had died when Munoo was a child.
Munoo is a victim of his aunt’s harshness. The novel opens with the shrill voice of
you drifted, you of the evil star? Come back! Your uncle is leaving
soon. You must go to the town . . . . Where have you gone you
Munoo is often beaten by his aunt. Whenever her aunt maltreats him, his
mind is haunted by the death of his parents. Many parents and elders think that
daily lives, children are spanked, slapped, hit, smacked, shaken, kicked, pinched,
punched, caned, flogged, belted, beaten and battered by adults - mainly by those
whom they trust most. This violence may be a deliberate act of punishment or just
fundamental human rights. Respect for human dignity and the right to physical
integrity are universal principles. The United Nations Convention on the Rights of
the Child (CRC) is the most ratified human rights treaty. It has been ratified by all
Member States of the Council of Europe. It is the first international human rights
care of parent(s), legal guardian(s) or any other person who has the
In Munoo’s case, his aunt and Uncle Daya Ram are the only hope. But he is
often ill-treated by them. The harsh reality of children is carefully pictured by Anand
amidst the Kangra hills. Anand describes his playful life of childhood. The child’s
right is recognized in Article 31 of UNCRC. “Children have the right to relax and
70
play, and to join in a wide range of cultural, artistic and other recreational activities”
(n.p.).
It is often described in the article that most wholly represents the child’s
right to be a child. The importance of play in children’s day to day lives for their
health and well-being is increasingly recognized now. Anand pictures the world of
childhood thus:
His uncle Daya Ram takes him to Sham Nagar. There Munoo works as a servant in
the house of Babu Nathooram, Sub-Accountant, Imperial Bank in Sham Nagar. The
different phases of Munoo’s experiences are apprenticed to life at the tender age of
fourteen. He walks on his barefoot for miles to Sham Nagar. Migration from rural
areas to big cities typically occurs due to debt, poverty, sudden death in the family.
In the case of Munoo, his father died as a victim of mortgage and usury. The
landlord snatched their five acres of land. His mother died of hard labour. Therefore,
he sets out to earn his livelihood. He earns five rupees a month. But Bibi
Uttamkumar says: “More money, in fact, than your father and mother ever saw”
Child labour is a source of income for poor families. Since its independence,
India has made a commitment to work against child labour and government laws do
not allow children to work under the age of 14 (Constitution of India cited in HRW
1996, 29). The Bonded Labour System Act of 1976 also ended forced labour by law
71
and freed all bonded labourers (HRW 1996, 30). In 1994 the Elimination of Child
Labour Programme was designed which promised to end child labour by the year
2000. All the policies of Indian government support the eradication of Child
Labour, but still the problem remains. Anand rightly analyses the miserable life of a
domestic servant even before the enactment of this Act. Child domestic workers are
Munoo leads a miserable life in the house of a minor bank clerk. He has to
work very hard, raking out the ashes in the fire place, scrubbing soiled utensils,
peeling vegetables, sweeping floors, arranging beds, drawing water from the well,
etc. As a young boy, he is not able to adopt to the routine life of domestic slavery.
He gradually accepts this type of life from morning to night. When Munoo comforts
himself at the doorstep, the lady of the house, Bibi Uttam Kaur, a snobbish and
suspicious woman ill-treats and humiliates him. Anand describes how Bibi insults
him:
You pig! You dog! The storm burst on his head as, hearing no
response to her call, she appeared at the door, saw him, and
shameless, vulgar, stupid hill boy! May the vessel of your life
never float in the sea of existence! May you die! What have
you done! Why didn’t you ask me where to go? May you fade
promotion and a rise in salary. Nathu Ram’s attempts to please the white man end in
a misfortune as Munoo drops the tea set. This ruinous incident troubles both the
master and the servant. Munoo is also slapped for the carelessness as he is “a slave,
a servant who should do the work ,all the odd jobs, someone to be abused, even
beaten” (C 245). Employers look for children as they are more compliant and less
aware of their rights than adults. As a child, Munoo can neither rebel nor escape
from the dependence. Child dependency needs assistance or placement because the
Children who work in depressing environments often endure emotional abuse. They
lack opportunities to properly socialize with their peers. Child labourers also often
upper classes. It shows how the callous class consciousness of Indian society makes
a coolie’s life a sad story of bitter sufferings. A prose-epic of modern India and a
deeply moving social tragedy, Coolie expresses Anand’s unshakable belief in the
essential dignity of man. Munoo’s tragic fate is typical of the millions of children
experience of Munoo.
One day Munoo quarrels with Varma, the servant of the sub-judge, at the
water pump. He is beaten black and blue by Varma. He goes home with his face
covered with blood. Thus he suffers at the hands of his fellow underdog of the
73
society. His injury is treated by Dr. Prem Chand, the Chhota Babu. During the days
of illness, he falls to thinking, “Money is, indeed, everything” (C 4). His mind
dwells for the first time on the difference between himself, the poor boy, and his
masters, the rich people. He recalls the poor people of his village and contrasts their
plight with the comfortable life of Jaysingh’s father, the landlord. He recalls the
anyone who could employ him, the lean face of Bishamber’s mother, who went
charring in the house of the landlord, his mother who moved the mill-stone round
and round. He now comes to understand but not quite clearly, that life is nothing but
a tragic drama of exploitation and money is the root of all goodness and happiness.
“But there were so many people, so many poor people, and only one or two rich
people in his village. . . .” (C 5), says Munoo to himself. He wonders whether all
these poor people would die like his parents. Anand employs the literary device
stream of consciousness extraordinarily. Then he writes, “But then he had been told
in school, there were hundreds of villages for one town, and if there were as many
poor people in all the villages as there were in his, surely there were many poor
people in the world than rich” (C 6). Thus a dim realisation of the exploitation of
of poverty and wealth. Bakha, suffered because of social inequality born of the
functions under a more rigid system. He belongs by birth to the second highest
Unschooled by all the abuses to which he had been subjected, he defies his
mistress’s stern command of not playing with her children, unmindful of the unjust
74
restraints imposed on the lower orders by the callous society. Munoo, one day, joins
the children’s game. Sheila, Nathuram’s daughter, sets up a barrier refusing to play
with him as her mother’s advice has been imprinted in her. She has accepted the
on all fours like a monkey. With a view to bringing naturalness into his role of a
dancing monkey, he springs upon her, and bites her on the cheek. This brings down
upon Munoo the traumatic disaster of much physical pain. His mistress rushes to the
What is your status that you should mix with the children of
Babu Nathu Ram too slaps and kicks “this son of a dog” (C 73). For Munoo, this
house is not a true house. He is treated neither as a member of the family nor as a
worker. He is treated as the property of Babu Nathu Ram. Child workers are used
Here law acts as a guardian against the inevitable anarchy that would engulf
come from. It doesn’t matter where children live, what language they
speak, what their parents do, whether they are boys or girls, what
their culture is, whether they have a disability or whether they are
Anand studies the miserable condition of child labour through a servant like
Munoo. He explores the existing relationship between Nathoo Ram and Munoo or
between Mr. W.P. England and Nathoo Ram. Anand expresses his contempt for all
for man exists only among the very poorest people; with
possess. (256)
Munoo is crushed every way under the heavy clutches of society. The relationship
Munoo’s suffering is mostly due to such established social order. It appears clearly
when Daya Ram, Munoo’s uncle, said to his master Babu Nathoo Mal:
In Babu Nathoo Ram’s house, Munoo is treated very cruelly. Bibiji makes
him do over-work from morning to night, constantly lashes at him with her tongue
and he is beaten mercilessly for even the least fault. Anand puts the following
words into the mouth of Chota Babu, Dr. Premchand (the younger brother of Babu
Natthu Ram) who has a sympathetic feeling for Munoo, the waif who becomes
The innocent girl child Sheila is deliberately exploited by her mother Bibiji
.She is butchered the moment she is plucked from mixing with the children of the
play with us, said Sheila (Mother said we are not to play with
you. She really liked him and was amused by his funny dance.
She wanted him to play with her, but her mother’s advice had
sunk into her and set up a barrier. She liked to touch him. She
came towards him and, catching him by the ear, dragged him
about. (C 57)
Anand is passionately concerned with the villages which are caught with poverty-
striken life and the cruelties of caste, filled with orphans, untouchables, and urban
Appreciation,
adolescent. (69)
At last Munoo realises that the root cause of his tragedy is poverty. As he laments:
matter. The Babus are like the Sahiblogs, and all servants look
Coolie explores the misery of an orphan whose life is spoilt due to the violation of
child rights. The poor are the victims of social, colonial, capitalistic, and communal
exploitation. The character of Munoo stresses the need for the declaration of human
Munoo said, urged by the cool breeze that came like a snake
Many characteristic features developed and built in childhood last one’s lifetime.
Munoo’s remarks on his own life are the clear instance of the pathetic and
(C 207). Munoo passes through his journey of life before achieving destiny, which
is merely survival. With regard to Coolie, M. K. Naik observes in his book Mulk Raj
Anand:
by the society. The evils of the society exploit the child like Munoo. Anand is
impelled by a passionate sense of social justice in the context of his keen awareness
of the predicament of the child like Munoo. As the Article 4 (Protection of Rights)
When countries ratify the Convention, they agree to review their laws
these areas are being met. They must help families protect children’s
rights and create an environment where they can grow and reach their
or creating new ones. Such legislative changes are not imposed, but
come about through the same process by which any law is created or
Article 41 of the Convention points out that when a country already has higher legal
standards than those seen in the Convention, the higher standards always prevail.
In the next phase, Munoo seeks escape. Fleeing from the hellish place, he
finds himself at a primitive pickle and jam factory in the feudal city of Daulatpur.
There too he is shocked to see poor labourers being ill-treated by Ganpat, one of the
cruel capitalists, picking up a log of fuel wood to beat and rouse the tired, sleeping
labourer.’We need a log of wood to awaken a log of wood,’ said Ganpat (C 94).
Fortunately, Seth Prabha Dayal, the other partner in the factory, treats him kindly.
He is gentle towards the boy. He sees his own image in the boy when he recalls the
images of his own father and mother, who had died at Hamirpur during his absence
in the city of Daulatpur. Seth Prabha Dayal is introduced by Anand to show that all
capitalists are not bad and cruel. It is heartening to note that here are a few
capitalists with compassionate hearts even in the exploiting capitalistic system in the
society.
A clash between Prabha and Ganpat, his employers, dooms Munoo’s fate
and drives him to work as a coolie in the grain market and then in the vegetable
market. There, Munoo realises that there is a keen competition for earning bread.
One of the greatest misfortunes of the labour class is that inspite of willingness to
work, they get no work. Blood and sweat, indeed, are very cheap, and bread very
dear.
80
The novel Coolie brings its child protagonist Munoo in contact with people
of various sections of Indian society. In the first phase, Munoo is with his Uncle at
Shamnagar. His tenure as a servant shatters his dreams. His escape from Babu’s
house lands him in subsequent troubles. In the third phase, Munoo happens to meet
Seth Prabhu Dayal who partly owns a pickle factory at Daulatpur. Munoo’s initial
his full sleep out, having gone to bed long after mid-night. He
limp, as if all the strength had gone out of his body and left
Then a chance meeting with a kind-hearted elephant trainer in a circus helps Munoo
to reach Bombay in search of work. In Bombay, another meeting, this time with a
worker in a factory, Hari, helps him to get a job in Sir George White Cotton Mills.
Very soon he realises the truth of the statement – ‘the bigger the city is, the more
cruel it is to the sons of Adam’ – made by the elephant-driver while bidding him
starched muslin and poor coolies, wearing tattered clothes. The imposing bungalows
of the English residents look down upon the congested hovels in which the poor
coolies have to live. The foreman, Jimmi Thomas, cousin to Ganpat, rents out a
straw hut to Hari and Munoo. One has to lift the sack which hangs at the low
doorway, stoop and have a look at this hut – “the roof of the clumsy straw mats,
which drooped dangerously at the sides from the cracked beams supporting it in the
81
middle, was not high enough for Munoo to stand in” Anand continues his
description of environs:
The mud floor was at a lower level than the pathway outside,
Anand shows how the unsanitary tenements provided by the employers make
the lives of the coolies miserable. He also describes the appalling working
conditions:
Hari’s little son grazes his right arm by ignorantly touching the belt of a machine.
There is no doctor at the mill to attend to him. The factory always gives the workers
the feeling of being shut in a cage. The workers always find the air there
suffocatingly hot. A queer smell of cotton and oil comes heavily upto their nostrills.
Jimmi Thomas, the foreman, demeans the poor coolies--Munoo, Hari and his family.
For the whole day’s job Thomas offers them all “. . . thirty rupees a month
altogether . . . ten for you, ten for that boy, five for your wife, two and a half each
Anand draws the attention to the various extortionate forces mercilessly ill-
treating the humble, poor coolies: foreman Jiy alias Chimta Sahib extracting regular
monthly commission from the poor coolies, always bullying them, standing by the
82
door of the preparing-shed every morning to exact salutes and other forms of respect
from the coolies, Nadir Khan, the warder charging exorbitant rate of interest on the
money he lends to the needy coolies, a Sikh grocer beating poor Shabhu for asking a
greater (and fair) amount of money for his fowl, and a tall Pathan, showing off his
strength, threatening factory workers with loud abuses, demanding heavy interest on
the loans given to them. Even when the pay is doled out to the workers, many unjust
cuts are effected. While handing over the light pay-packet to Hari, the foreman says,
“Ten rupees you owe me in cash. A rupee interest on the loan. Three rupees rent on
the hut for one month. One rupee for repair of hut. Four rupees cut for damaged
cloth. . .” (C 234).
The exploited worker knows these phrases well from their long experience:
‘Loan interest, rent, damaged cloth!’ Though they resent them, they have learnt to
respect them. They accept the cut meekly, salute the foreman and withdraw. But
their sad faces tell the grim tale. Ratan, a wrestler worker, who defies the foreman,
Anand, an apostle of humanity, feels great sympathy for these eternally homeless
coolies who squat, moan and gossip, outside closed shops at night, pale and ghastly
under the glare of gas-lights. All the workers who hear of Ratan’s discharge
sympathize with him, but most of them are meek and docile. They only mumble a
conventional phrase: “Never mind, brother, this is the will of God”. The misery of
their lives has completely robbed them of all their energy. Sauda, an Anand persona,
addresses the workers thus: “Do not all the insults you people suffer rouse you from
apathy to which you have succumbed? . . . I tell you that they have ground you
The coolies listen to him with rapt attention, sitting bent with their curved
spines. Sauda’s powerful speech descries the miseries of the coolies and workers.
Before the workers can implement their decision of going on strike, the mill goes on
short time. The announcement creates a chaos among the coolies. The coolies attend
the meeting addressed by the union leaders. The leaders seem to be interested in the
welfare of the labourers but there seems to be no homogeneity among them. But
before the strike commences, the capitalists succeed in diverting the fury of the
Mainwaring. He pulls his mistress’s rickshaw, seeing the world of the upper class
society. He daydreams that he too could belong to this society. The hard work
The novel establishes Anand as a revolutionary writer of his time. The vivid
account of the miseries of the coolies, beasts of burden, moves to pity. Saros
Cowasji aptly puts it: “He (Anand) certainly shows some of Dickens’ remarkable
facility for portraying slum life and to present a host of details to make his picture
convincing” (73). The faithful picture of the deplorable conditions under which the
coolies in the factory toil exposes the callous and cruel attitude of the exploiting
capitalists. Bakha, in Untouchable, suffers because of his lower place in the caste-
system, while Munoo suffers because of his lower place in the class-system. Coolie
is thus a story of waifs and strays, full of ambitions and hopes, crushed under the
capitalism.
84
Anand describes touchingly and convincingly the plight of the child – the
rejected, maltreated, explioted and cast away- -as one in perpetual conflict with
injustice and cruelty. This novel finds exploitation of the many by the few in full
swing at many levels: village, family, factory and mill. Prof. M. K. Naik rightly calls
Coolie ‘a tragic drama of exploitation’. This exploitation begins even from his
discontinue his education due to poverty. The uneducated heroes, Bakha, Munoo
and Bikhu have passion for education which remains unfulfilled because of their low
social status. Anand holds the view that man is the master of his destiny and thus he
writes:
under those who said they could renounce more and achieve
This doctrine of Karma, the theory of inevitable consequence, has been used as an
instrument of exploitation by the clever privileged classes and limitless blind faith in
it has been the root-cause of the sufferings of the underdogs of the society. Anand
In his creative writings Anand gives ample illustrations to show how the
theory of Karma, based on unreasoned belief, is cleverly built up by the upper orders
to maintain a firm hold on the lower sections of the society. He presents a picture of
many victims of the unknown fate, the Karma of good and bad deeds in the past. He
holds that human mind must emerge from the morass of fatalism into which it has
fallen. He therefore abhors those who maintain that everyone is born to his position
and has to accept his lot through the cycle of birth to rebirth. These people really
consign a large section of humanity to the inequities of hell on earth. The sufferers
lick their sores and use fatalistic phrases about the utter helplessness of their lot.
Anand wants these fatalists to get to grips with realities. He has boundless faith in
man in spite of all the adverse circumstances that keep him bogged in the mire.
The Brahmins, the Kshatriyas, the two upper castes in Hindu society, justify
their superiority by asserting that they have earned their position by good deeds of
multiple lives. Anand criticizes them for holding such unreasonable belief. He holds
that no man, irrespective of his caste or position in life, should be denied the
fundamental rights.
The lowly workers are equally the victims of fatalism. This is illustrated in
the attitude of Munoo. He is passive while society is active. He does not build his
own life. Life is built for him. He is too much bound to his low-caste status. So
brutality goes rather unquestioned. Munoo, unlike Bakha and Bikhu, accepts
representative of the oppressed sections of the society and gets accustomed to the
86
sufferings and becomes fatalists. The novelist shows the illiterate coolies’ meek
submission to fatalism.
responsible for it are poverty, caste tradition, size of the family, labour scarcity,
illiteracy, ignorance, unavailable schooling facilities etc. The low income of parents
which is not adequate to meet the basic needs of the family, force the children to
work and supplement the family income. Poverty is a common feature of devel-
line. In the rural areas the people have to sell the labour of their children to eke out a
bare subsistence.
Besides poverty, one major factor, which has a strong relationship with child
labour is caste. If one compares the child with the caste structure of the country, it
dren work at a younger age for their own and their families. Lower caste children
combination of poverty and the lack of social security network is also responsible
for bonded child labour. Children are exploited, exposed to hazardous work con-
ditions and paid a pittance for their long hours of work. They are forced to leave
welfare programmes, legislation and administrative action in the past few decades, a
The focal point in all the five phases (Bilaspur, Sham Nagar, Daulatpur,
Bombay, Simla) is the innocence of Munoo pitted against the merciless society.
world. At the same time Anand also underlines that poverty, illiteracy and
87
innocence are the roots of his ruin. Munoo is underprivileged from the beginning
and remains so till the end of his life because society acts upon him, offers him a
rootless existence, keeps him under a perpetual threat and ruthlessly pushes him
towards his tragic end. Thus the novel is a tool to advocate the necessity of the child
rights.
that of Coolie. Anand wants to show the comparative destructive power of the two
evils and suggests that one can survive the severity of caste but not that of money.
Anand has used his protagonist in most of the novels as his spokesperson but in
fourteen serves as the writer’s mouthpiece. Anand instead uses a union leader Sarda
to give way to his views on the plight of the labourers. The expectation of the
workers from the owners of the factory are given in the charter. He tries to show the
difference between the rules and the realities. The charter says that the workers are
human beings and not machines. They should be saved from the clutches of the
money lenders. But exactly opposite things happen. Though there are laws against
such exploitation the rulers are always on the side of the exploiters. Though there is
a law against child labour, children are openly exploited in the capitalistic society.
When Anand was asked by Girija Priyadarshini in her interview with Anand in 1988
about the solution to the problem, Anand answered that labour problem can be
Untouchable and Coolie are powerful social tragedies of Bhaka and Munoo
respectively. Both are hounded by the cruel and inhuman social force around them.
88
Anand universalises the individual tragedy of Bhaka and Munoo. Their love, pain ,
despair, and longings are traumatic. The literature of the colonised countries records
the imposition of the imported and imperial culture or a colonised. The drown
trodden had to endure the havoc created by the upper class people. The subalterns
desperately voice their plea for treating them also as humans. In his scathing attacks
and criticism on the society that crushes the individuals, Anand divulges the fact he
Treatment of Labour Rights in Two Leaves and a Bud and The Big Heart
From the historical perspective, Indian English Literature has passed through
recently Indian English Literature. Fiction is the genre by which Indian writers in
English have made their most significant contribution. It is undoubtedly the most
world. It is assumed that Indian novel in English has its roots in the nineteenth
century realistic tradition of English novel. But with the passage of time the Indian
novel in English has become thoroughly Indian in terms of the themes and
techniques. The novelists of around 1930s grasped the social scene with an insight
into the human consciousness and who could interpret the real Indian world,
distinctive in treatment of issues in their fiction. Widely- read novelist Mulk Raj
Anand is interested in writing obviously about the lower class life. He is influenced
follows the ancient Indian tradition of story-telling, but his approach towards themes
and events is that of a social realist. Therefore, his novels are the novels of protest
and social realism. Anand is influenced by the themes related to human predicament
such as protest against social and industrial evils, the status of women in India,
Gupta aptly says in his book Towards a Closer Understanding of Anand, Indo
Anand’s early novels Two Leaves and a Bud (1940) and The Big Heart
(1942) justify this point. Anand has brought in them the lower class down trodden
the two novels Two Leaves and a Bud and The Big Heart to fecundate how Anand’s
writings go straight to the heart of the problems of our time, the problems of human
sensibility in the present context of the tragedy of the modern man too. Anand
focused his attention on the suffering, misery and wretchedness of the poor as a
result of the exploitation by the moneyed people in the Indian society. Religious
hypocrisy, feudal system, east-west encounter, the place of women in the society,
superstition, poverty, hunger and exploitation are his common themes. In his novels
Two Leaves and a Bud and The Big Heart, he has focused on literary representation
of the culture of ill- treatment of the labourers by the dominant masters. Literature
has been and will continue to be the great promoter of a culture of human rights.
Two Leaves and a Bud, shares much with the publications of the 1940s’ in Britain
and United States which also deal with the down-trodden. Anand’s voice for the
faithful record of inhuman behaviour and the exploitation of the poor peasant. The
conditions with starvation. After his wife’s death, Gangu’s life centres around his
daughter. When Reggie Hunt, the Assistant Manager of Tea Estate, tries to rape
The Big Heart (1945) is Anand’s last novel before independence. The fight
between the individual and the society is again presented in this novel. The
protagonist experiences the severity of all kinds. There is a fight between social
reality and fantasy. The protagonist Ananta in symbolizes the new upsurge in
kinds of social issues in which a prevailing problem is dramatized through its effects
on the characters of the novel. The protest novel places an emphasis on the idea of
gradual social change, while the proletarian novel may emphasize revolution.
of the direct experience of working class life and is essentially an intended device of
workers who experience hardships is more concerned with the imposition of reform
from above than with revolution from within. In England during the 1830s and
1840s the social novel arose out of the social and political upheavals. This was in
many ways a reaction to rapid industrialization and the social, political and
government and industry and the suffering of the poor. Also, it was a means of
commenting on the suffering of the poor, who were not profiting from England’s
economic prosperity. To understand the origin of labour rights and its impact it is
The Industrial Revolution was a period from the eighteenth to the nineteenth
and eventually all over the world. A new class of factory workers emerged in the
92
practices. They resulted in an increased supply of food and raw materials. Industrial
revolution increased production, efficiency and profits, and there was an increase in
commerce, foreign and domestic supply. It moved the people from the countryside
and managers on the one side and the workers on the other. The Industrial and
agricultural revolutions marked a new era in the history of human kind. The impact
Farming was the primary livelihood of people. If the crops failed to provide
expected food, they had to starve. To begin with, cottage industry emerged. It was
home with their own equipment. The cotton industry proved to be profitable for the
urban merchants. So the cottage industry was developed to take advantage of the
farmers’ free time and use it to produce quality textiles for a reasonable price. The
cottage industry helped the individual to prepare the country for the industrial
revolution. It enhanced the English economy through the increase of trade. So there
enabled the country to improve their economy. Britain had established an extensive
colonial empire and successfully excluded the other powers like Spain, Holland and
France from their markets. The growing demand for the British coals on these
of the eighteenth century were helpful in increasing the output of the product. It
fulfilled the changing needs of the society. But smaller farmers were forced out of
93
rural lands by the owners. Agricultural revolution caused a lot of people to move to
the cities looking for jobs. Due to cotton industry, many people had gained
business and opened up new factories. The successful merchants sold their products
throughout Britain and the rest of the world. Consequently labour forces emerged in
society.
The industrial revolution and the rise of capitalism from about 1750
destroyed the existing networks of social support. Individuals now had to sell their
labour on the labour markets at the prevailing market rate. These workers and their
families were completely dependent for their livelihood on the regular payment of
wages. Large numbers of labourers were frequently unemployed for long periods
without any form of insurance against the risks of work injuries, sickness or
poverished conditions.
security, the French Revolution made a beginning. The Declaration of the Rights of
Man and of the Citizen is a fundamental document of the French Revolution. The
Assembly on August 26, 1789, was one of the most significant events of the French
Revolution. It defined the individual and collective rights of all the estates of the
realm as universal. The Assembly believed that the rights of man were being
ignored and neglected. It believed the rights of man were natural, unalienable and
sacred. Some of those rights were freedom of religion, speech and press. The
declaration was a summary of the ideals and principles of the French Revolution. It
also justified the destruction of a government based upon absolutism and privilege.
94
It offered a new vision of government in which natural rights replaced the will of the
king as the justification for authority. It would become the preamble to the
constitution in 1791.
Man and Citizen in August 1789, they aimed to topple the institutions surrounding
hereditary monarchy and establish new ones based on the principles of the
The goal of the Enlightenment’s proponents was to apply the methods learned from
only come from the careful study of actual conditions and the application of an
meant freedom of religion, freedom of the press, and freedom from unreasonable
heads of states all over the Western world. The kings and queens consulted them,
government ministers joined their cause, and in the British North American
colonies, American revolutionaries put some of their ideas into practice which are
stated in the Declaration of Independence and the new Constitution of the United
States.
constitutional monarchy. The basic principle was that all men are born and remain
free and equal in rights. It guaranteed liberty, property, security and resistance to
prohibition of slavery and servitude; the right to freely choose work, equal pay for
equal work; decent remuneration for work performed; a dignified life for a worker
and his/her family; right to form and join trade unions; right to rest and have leisure,
labour rights get separated into civil and political rights (International Covenant on
Civil and Political Rights, 1966), and as economic and social rights (International
First World War and the revolutionary wave which swept over Russia and elsewhere
paved the way for the founding of the International Labour Organization (ILO) in
improving labour conditions, was an essential precondition for universal peace. ILO
sought the promotion of social justice and internationally recognized human and
labour rights. ILO was founded in 1919 and it became the first specialized agency of
the UN in 1946. The ILO formulated international labour standards of basic labour
of forced labour, equality of opportunity and treatment and other norms. It focused
on the entire spectrum of work related issues. The ILO is the only tripartite United
Nations agency.
Philadelphia, which restated the fundamental aims and purposes of the ILO. It
96
prescribes labour standards such as fair labour standards, minimum labour standards,
basic or core labour standards etc. Several factors have also been attributed to non-
observance of labour standards such as unfair trade and labour practice, state of
International Labour Organization (ILO) passed the convention in June 1976. The
preamble of the last ACP-EEC (African Caribbean and Pacific States) convention
was signed at Lome in 1984. Besides, the world summit on social development held
at Copenhagen in March 1995 had tried to establish the basis for such a minimum
minimum labour standards. Since its inception the ILO has adopted one hundred and
eighty one legally binding conventions and one hundred and eighty eight
recommendations aimed at improving labour standards across the globe. There are
eight core labour standards. Freedom of Association and Protection of the Right to
Labour (1930), Abolition of Forced Labour (1959), Minimum Age (1973), Worst
There are seven important conventions. (Convention No. 29, 87, 98, 100,
105, 111, and 138). These Conventions are also known as social clauses, labour
clauses, social concerns, etc. These are the instruments in the hands of ILO to
improve the living and working conditions of working class in the third world. The
legislate and execute the international labour standards in the member countries. The
freedom of association, equal pay for equal work, safe working conditions, abolition
97
of women at work places. These international labour standards were formulated and
few of them were amended by the ILO between 1919 and 1978 with a view to
India is a founder member of the ILO. India has ratified thirty seven of the
one hundred and eighty one conventions. The constitution of India upholds all the
Out of the seven core labour conventions, India has ratified three, they are (i) forced
labour No.29, (ii) equal remuneration No.100. and (iii) discrimination No.111.The
government of India has ratified some conventions such as hours of work industry
convention 1919, night work (women ) convention 1919 , minimum age convention
right to collective bargaining (convention No.87 and 98 ) were not ratified by India
due to technical difficulties involving trade union rights for civil servants. Freedom
Trade Union Act 1926 meets with part of the objectives of the convention.
The Indian Constitution upholds the principle of equality between men and
women. Laws have been enacted for fixing the hours and minimum wages of
labourers and to improve their living conditions. Various security schemes have
been framed. Besides, there are various labour laws, like Trade Union Act 1926, The
Minimum Wages Act 1948, Employees State Insurance Act 1948, Industrial
Disputes Act 1949, Industrial Disputes Decision Act 1955, Payment of Bonus Act
1955, Personal Injuries, (compensation insurance ) Act 1963, Maternity Benefits Act
98
Systems (Abolition ) Act 1976, Equal Remuneration Act 1976, Interstate Migrant
Labour (Prohibition and Regulation ) Act 1986, etc. However, these labour laws and
policies are applicable for workers in the organized sector only. What is the present
position of unorganized workers in India? Have they got basic rights of labour as per
labour standards? Have they been protected by various labour laws? What is the
status of migrant workers? These are main issues of unorganized workers. They
constitute ninety two percent of the total workforce in the country. As against this an
estimated eight percent of the labour force in India falls in the formal or organized
unfair dismissal trade union rights, wage and working conditions, health insurance,
Literature emerges out of life and records people’s dreams ideas, hopes and
aspirations, failures and disappointments, motives and passions, and experiences and
observations. Over the years, literature has reflected the prevailing social issues of
each era. The proletarian trend in literature began in the early twentieth century, in
places such as Britain, the USSR, France, Germany, Japan, Italy, China and India.
internationally on the socialist and communist Left after the Russian Revolution. It
deals with every aspect of society from the standpoint of the working class,
presenting a complete picture of the class struggle and their aspirations. Workers
appalling conditions in factories and mines, the plight of child labour, violence
against women, rising criminality, and epidemics because of overcrowding and poor
sanitation in cities.
A few literary works are directed at the middle class people in order to create
sympathy for the working class, and change their mind set. This kind of novel is
England question’, was first used by Thomas Carlyle in Chartism (1839), and
social and political issues with a focus on the representation of class, gender and
labour as well as on social unrest and the growing antagonism between the rich and
the poor. A significant early example of this genre is Sybil, or The Two Nations, a
conditions in which the majority of England’s working classes lives. Another early
example of this social novel is Charles Kingsley’s Alton Locke (1849) which sets out
to expose the social injustice suffered by workers in the clothing trade as well as the
important concern in the novels of Charles Dickens. He pictures the poverty and
unhealthy living conditions associated with it, the exploitation of ordinary people by
money lenders, the corruption and incompetence of the legal system as well as of the
poor law.
town. It particularly criticizes the effect of utilitarianism on the life of the working
class. There are many writers who heralded a touch of life and labouring conditions
of the working class, such as Ivan Vazor of Bulgaria, Garcia Lorca of Spain, Louis
100
Neruda of Chille and Vladimir Mayakovsky and Maxim Gorky of Russia. The wave
then prevailing social, economic and political upheaval of the country. Many Indian
writers were triggered by the spirit. Their novels and dramas throw light on the
working class. The regional writers started producing their literary creations in their
Punjabi, and Gujarati. But at the same time a large number of writers use the English
The first ever novelist of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries is
Sarat Chandra Chatterjee. His novel Mahesh revolves around the life of a Muslim
tenant farmer under a Hindu Zamindar. It deals with the agrarian problems of rural
true carnage of 1967 in which forty two Harijans were burnt to death in a clash
between a landlord and the peasants. The novel probes agrarian problems and
engagements of dalits, who have always been at the lower strata of the labour
agitational play originally in Malayalam but translated into most major Indian
(1936) is a Hindi novel by Prem Chand. This novel explores the lives of farmers and
agricultural labourers in rural India. It successfully exhibits their pathetic life stuck
play about the exploitation of tenant farmers in Orissa. Anand also belongs to
Proletarian writers.
101
Anand’s Two Leaves and a Bud is based on an actual report of the racial or
imperial exploitation penetrated by the British rulers in the early period of their
regime. Mulk Raj Anand in his letter to J. F. Power says that he conceived this
novel as a poem in suffering. He also admits that it is the most bitter of his novels
but it is poetic. In the preface to the second edition of Two leaves and a Bud, Anand
recalls,
What I to say in it was deep in me from the days when I lived for a
while near plantation in Assam and visited Ceylon and saw the
say the descriptions in Two leaves and a Bud are comparative under
estimate. Only decent English men at home will not easily believe
71)
The title of the novel is taken from the refrain sung by the coolies while they
The song is crisp and suggestive. Though the workers find a tilt and swing in
it, it throws light on the monotonous routine of the work. They sing it for relaxation
but uncover their own drabness. “The little hands clipped the leaves more eagerly
The novel is set in one of the tea estates, a symbol of colonial exploitation in
the British Empire situated on Assam hills in the north-east India. The entire drama
takes place on the tea-estate. Mulk Raj Anand’s novels focus on the basic conditions
in which man is living. Each one of his novels deals with a social problem. In Two
Leaves and a Bud (1937) the problem of the exploitation of indentured labour in tea
discussed. The Big Heart is about village artisans in South India in the early 1940s
utensils. This chapter examines the violation of labour rights as presented in Two
Leaves and a Bud, Anand says that his characters are real. The exploitation of the
labourers and poor forced him to write about them. As he says in the preface:
All these heroes, as the other men and women who had emerged in
my novels and short stories, were dear to me, because they were the
youth. And I was repaying the debt of gratitude I owed them for
were not mere phantoms . . . they were the flesh of my flesh and
more than what a writer does when he seeks to interpret the truth
which was initiated in the early nineteenth century, with the establishment of
indigo plantations. Gradually several new commodities came to form the staple of
Assam in 1834 and rapidly grew in size and value to become the major exporting
industry of India. At its height, not less than a million workers were employed in
the tea plantations of Assam, Darjeeling, Bengal Dooars and in the Western Ghats
of South India. The labour force to these remote regions were imported over a long
wages and working conditions under a severe work regime. The history of labour
Many scholars argue that the plantation employment conditions provided a model
for development of the broader industrial relations regime in the colonial period.
By its sheer size and spread, plantations have deeply imprinted themselves
on the labour landscape of India and the patterns developed in the colonial period
continue to influence the structure of labour relations long after Independence even
with major changes in the pattern of ownership and various welfare measures of the
Government of India. A key feature of the plantation industry was the strict control
over the wage component as it formed a large part of the cost of production. This
consequent price instability. These relations had direct effect on the living condition
The novel Two Leaves and a Bud gives an impression that the exploitation in
exploitation of the English working class by the ruling classes in England of 1820s
and 1830s. Here the exploited are the Indian labourers. The novel exhibits the
and misery of the workers on the tea plantations of Assam. The labourers are
actually treated as indentured coolies and are subjected to a colonial, oppressive and
militaristic authority as though they are not even eligible to possess fundamental
every stage of its work -- clearance of jungle, making the land suitable for
plantation, work for the nursery, giving manure both in the nursery and in the
is the heart and soul of tea plantation. Without labour not a single tea plant can
survive. But unfortunately the life of the tea labourers is not as good as it should be
in Assam. A tea labourer hardly gets a chance to lead a good life. These estates are
located in interior places and this contributes to the backwardness and exploitation
of them by the tea planters. The workers devoid of the basic amenities of life live in
impoverishment and die in obscurity. The tea planters usually exploit the tea
pluckers in every possible way. Non-education, poverty, poor standard of living and
The novel begins with the tragic journey of Gangu, a landless peasant from
account of the loan his brother had taken from the money lender against their
ancestral land and the house. The tea estate agent Buta takes Gangu to the tea estate
105
Assam with his wife Sajani, with their daughter Leila and son Buddhu. This journey
has been arranged by Buta, the Sardar and tout of Macpherson Tea Estate, Assam.
While travelling in the train, Gangu thinks that “Life is a journey into the unknown”
(TLB 5). But the experiences of Gangu lead him ultimately towards an impending
doom. The conversation between Gangu and Buta about the rate of interest, the
sahib’s charge, made Gangu more suspicious about the life in the estate. Soon he
discovers that the promises made to him were all false. His only hope is to get a
Gangu and his family reach the steaming valley of tea plantations. Anand
The morning mist had risen over the valley and evaporated with the
dazzling burst of sunlight. The air was still under the clear even sky.
The welter of leafage was tense beneath the world’s hollow cup.
There was a concentrated lull in the slow heart of the day, as if India
Gangu realizes that he is lured by the false promises of the agent. He begins
doom” (TLB 12). On the tea estate De-la-Harve, the doctor visits the house of the
planter Charles-Craft Gook. He talks ironically and expresses his view about the
British rule in India. His view is that the British should allow the Indian to run their
own country. Gangu and his family are given a tiny tin hut to live in. They start
working under the supervision of Reggie Hunt, the assistant planter, a symbol of evil
and lust. Narain a coolie describes him rightly when he says “He is very Badmash
sahib and he has no consideration for any one’s mother or sister. He is openly living
106
with three coolie women!” (TLB 42). They are provided a hut without any safety.
The hygienic conditions of the occupants are very poor. A tea plantation is like a
prison house. “The prison has no bars, but it is nevertheless an unbreakable jail”
(TLB 32). These labourers have left their native places and have come to the tea
He had wished to believe that it was true that it was possible for a
other. (TLB 2)
The estate labourers have always lived inside the plantations and housing has
owners. Narain says that “the chowkidars go round at night with a lamp and open
every door to see if we are all at home. There used to be roll call every night before
I came” (TLB 38). The middle men are under human rights law, people have a right
to work under just and favourable conditions of work. Article 23 of the UDHR
states: “Everyone has the right to work, to free choice of employment to just and
article clearly assures the workers ‘just and favourable’ healthy and safe conditions
of work. Their working conditions should ensure their physical and psychological
safety. Article 6 (1) of the ICESCR provides clear support for Article 23 of the
The states parties to the present covenant recognize the right to work,
provides social security. The social security system ensures that people do not
starve to death and provides the minimal income required for life.
were exploited by every superior. Narain briefs Gangu of the fate of coolies in the
estate: “Nobody knows what may or may not happen here, brother,” said Narain.
“Nobody’s mother or sister is safe in this place” (TLB 35).The right to work
includes a right to work in safe and healthy conditions. The plantation workers
often work in poor and unsafe conditions. They have no representation and their
After a week while going to the Bazaar, Gangu realizes that they are paid
less than what he used to get alone by working on the fields at his village. He
censures the white for the exploitation of the poor villages. Even at the Bazaar the
farmers are compelled to sell their products at cheap rates and buy the essential
commodities at high rates. Gangu returns with high fever. Gangu gets eight annas
for his whole family’s hard labour of one full week. But in his village, he alone
used to earn eight annas a day. Though the coolies work hard, they are paid barely
eight annas a day. Once in a week, they visit the market to buy essentials, where the
merchants sell things at an exorbitant rate that make things worse. The Constitution
of India envisages a just and humane society and accordingly gives place to the
The Minimum Wages Act, 1948 is based on Article 43 of the Constitution of India
which states,
108
Gangu who dreamt of a house and land, was living in a tin-roofed shed and
little he got as possessions. Besides, the coolies were not provided with adequate
water supply and sanitation facilities which made them vulnerable to dreadful
diseases. He realizes that Bata has pulled him into an inescapable trap. So often
Gangu ignorantly listens to the words of a selfish barbar, Buta Ram. Buta talks
about high wages and about the free land so on. Therefore The Minimum Wages
Act, 1948 was implemented. It aims at making provision for statutory fixation of
minimum rates.
further frightened by the news about the death toll of cholera. Gangu suffers from
under his breath, till Leila is married, and Buddhu has grown up’ (TLB 83). As a
responsible father, he wants his son and daughter to settle down safely. His wife
who represents “the fast down village women whose life had been spent cleaning
109
and washing and cooking and cleaning again” (TLB 36) is infected. The epidemic
of malaria spreads.
The families of British officers gathers in the club to talk about the epidemic,
Doctor John Dela Harve is the medical office. He comes with Doctor Chunilal.
Hunt insults Chunilal for his being a black doctor and orders the bearer to turn him
out. He embodies the racial superiority of the white. Other English officers Ralf,
Hitchcock and Twitee support him. But Harve is a different kind of man. He does
not hate Indians. He promptly visits Gangu’s hut. Anand describes his visit.
eyes glared at him, lusterless and cold. He put his hand to her head,
groped for her pulse, sounded her heart. There was no answer.
(TLB 88)
The sanitary condition plays a key role in spreading cholera. The doctor asks
the manager Croft Cooke to take some precautionary measures. But the manager
remarks “These coolies are subhuman, and do not all together value the benefits of
hygiene” (TLB 29). Sajani dies of Cholera. Gangu is not in a position to dispose the
body because he does not have enough money for the funeral expenses. They are far
away from their land. He has no money to buy a red cloth to make a bamboo hearse.
As Gangu says:
which the sahib may give me if you talk to him in ‘angrezi’ and get
me the loan I want . . . my wife died last night. And I have been ill.
The attempt to get money goes in vain. But the farmers are bound to the middle
men by their debt. It is a never-ending cycle of poverty. The manager of the estate,
and staring at the coolie. You bloody fool, get out! Get out! You have
been spreading infection all over the place! Didn’t you know that you
were under segregation? By whose orders did come here? (TLB 114)
Gangu goes to Bura Sahib to borrow money for the funeral of his wife. But due to
the fear of infection he orders Gangu to leave at once. Though he is the head of the
estate he has neither any plan to mitigate the sufferings of the coolies nor any
sympathy to understand their problems. Gangu borrows money from the baniya and
divided into two classes: the Europeans and the coolies. Race relations and
hierarchies are also an engaging theme. Whereas Croft-Cooke and Reggie Hunt
represent the average English mentality of superior birth La Havre stands for the
other side of the British mentality of treating the Indians as equals. Sashi Bhushan
Bhattacharya and Chuni Lal exhibit the typical Indian mentality of inferiority
before the white master. The hierarchy is also reflected in a plantation culture
between a master and a servant is cruel. These tea estates are commercial
enterprises, not inclined to give top priority to welfare of the workers. As Naik
comments in Mulk Raj Anand : “The Indian labourer is just a piece of property, a
sub-human being with no rights and all duty, whose only utility is to be a serviceable
tool in the vast machine of the plantation” (47). John de la Havre, the medical
111
officer; helps him for the funeral of Sajani. Gangu says that she has attained death
happily. C.D. Narasimhiah comments on his death: “Death has ceased to frighten
these poor, they are past all fright; it is life that is a threat, and death is a release”
(126).
One of the most remarkable features of tea plantations is the large number of
female workers. The feeding mothers leave their babies in cradle. When the mother
returns, her baby is in the dust. The women are not even allowed to feed their
children.
And they were really no trouble because they did not have to be left
at home. No sooner were they born than they could come with their
suckling humanity lay there under the torrid sun upon the Mother
Women face the burden of responsibility for the housework and childcare in
addition to their employment. They rise before dawn to tend to their households and
then set out to spend all day labouring in the fields. The children of tea workers in
Assam suffer due to their parents’ low wages and miserable living conditions.
health care facilities such as a dispensary, drainage, water supply and sanitation.
Women who are a major workforce in the estate continue to face increased
plantation. Nobody’s mother or sister or even wife is safe on the tea estate. The
women coolies are compelled to work on the wages less than those of the male
coolies. They leave their children in the baskets while going to the tea gardens.
112
When they return they find many of them lying in the dust or a drain or even dead
by the wayside. Motherhood seems to be a bane for the women because many
children die of malnutrition and lack of proper sanitary conditions. But they keep on
giving birth to the babies in order to increase hands to earn the living.
The supervisors do not hesitate to punish women. The picture of a mother who is
chased to the work spot even while she is suckling her child shows how inhuman the
rulers are even towards women. The white compel the coolies to hand over their
wives and daughters to them for the sake of fun and frolic and many a time to satisfy
their sexual passion. Being the masters, they expect that their slaves should offer
Sometimes they bribe the poor husbands by ‘bashish’ to win their wives. If
they protest they use their guns to terrify them. In urban areas the British behave
like cunning imposters. But in the remote parts like the valley of Assam they behave
like wild animals. In such conditions labourers do not claim any labour rights and
not even raise either their voice against such exploitation by their masters. The
and unlike other whites, he always stands for the rights of coolies. He is insulted by
women. In tea plantation, sexual harassment is a serious problem because all the
higher officials are men. If the women labourers fail to satisfy their sexual needs,
they fake other charges and give them too much work. Reggie Hunt, the assistant
manager of the tea estate treats all labourers cruelly. A discontent spreads in the
113
plantation because of Reggie Hunt’s brutal behaviour. Hunt succeeds in keeping the
wife of Sardar Niogi, the supervisor, as his mistress. Chambeli, a dark woman, ex-
mistress of Hunt, quarrels with the wife of Niogi. He lathicharges the coolies
gathered to watch the show. Hunt arrives on the spot and orders his supervisors to
attack the coolies. Supervisors beat the coolies so mercilessly that one among them
dies and a number of others are seriously injured. All of the coolies are provoked.
The angry but frightened group of coolies marches towards the office with Gangu as
their leader. But Hunt and Crock stop them on their way and compel them to return.
Gangu visits his neighbour Narain to express his wish to return home.
Narain makes him realize how impossible it is even to think about it. He convinces
Gangu and others that they have to settle there forever. Craft is disturbed with the
unrest among the coolies. He sends for arms and ammunition. The arrival of the
plane disturbs the agitators. They run helter-skelter to save themselves from the
possible air- raid. The doctor comes to help them but realizes that mutiny has been
crushed. He decides to leave India. His economic condition worsens with the
Like most of the coolies and peasants, Gangu considers his exploitation as
one more reward for the misdeeds of his past life. But when the exploitations of all
sorts weigh heavier on his soul his faith shatters. Some critics say that it is the tragic
flaw in the character of Gangu. A peasant who is superstitious suddenly denies the
presence of god. But through the pessimistic words of Gangu, Anand shows the
strong impact of the colonial exploitation that crushes the faith in god among the
exploited people. Though Gangu is the central character, Anand does not make him
rebellious. He shows that courage leads the march of the labourers but ‘a tremor of
weakness travelled down his spine” (TLB 151). His instinct makes him lead the
114
march but his experience makes him surrender to the exploiters. He cries, “Lord,
God, deliver me save me from the math of my enemies. My children are young and
In the end Gangu dies at the hand of the exploiter for no fault of his own.
However, he does not die the death of a hero. He on the contrary dies like one of the
untimely death of the hero creates anguish in the mind of the readers. The trial
which follows the murder of the hero creates intense anger against the colonial,
capitalist, exploiters, which seem to be the very aim of the novelist. If Gangu
embodies the inferiority of the ruled, Reggie Hunt, the assistant Manager embodies
the racial superiority of the ruler. He flosses the coolies almost regularly. He calls
Indians “craning black men diseased and rotten” (TLB 269). He tries to seduce
almost every woman on the plantation. The plantation can be called a symbol of
Though he leads the coolies he knows how futile their revolt against the ruler is.
two types of characters; the rulers and the ruled. Most of the rulers are exploiters.
They cruel hearted businessmen. Most of the characters are life- like but somehow
the British persons represented here are not as true to reality as are the Indians.
characters are shallow. Due to the absence of psychological insight into the Indian
characters they are also not so convincingly projected. The British characters are
The Indian characters, on the contrary suffer meekly due to their inferiority
complex and they surrender to their rulers in order to save themselves from hunger.
The central character Gangu is a middle aged person who can be called a symbol of
all the coolies in the early stage of the British colonialism who are lured away from
their native places. As a victim of the feudal exploitation at the hands of the
landlord in his native place, he is brought into the valley of Assam. Here too he
becomes the victim of the colonial and capitalistic exploitation. Through Dr.Harwe’s
the tropic breed disease and that they cannot check the tribulations of
lassitude even of death and on the other hand, the supercilious rich,
questioning the ideals of glory and power and wealth . . . (TLB 123-
124)
The theme of Anand’s earlier novels Coolie and of Two leaves and a Bud are
the same. By shifting the act of the colonial exploitation from the cotton mill in
experienced middle aged man Gangu, replacing the foreman of the cotton mill by
the assistant planter of the tea-estate, Anand succeeds in making the point that with a
116
slight difference in the quality and the quantity, the colonial and the capitalistic
exploitation is more or less the same everywhere in India. In fact the harassment of
the coolies in the tea plantation is more gruesome than that of the cotton mills of the
big cities. So Anand is more aggressive and bitter while attacking the dehumanizing
Gangu gets involved in the strife and is beaten when workers stage a
repress them by show of force. Workers are not even free to leave the Estate job
once they are brought here by fraud. It turns into a virtual prison house where white
men forcibly molest workers’ wives and daughters. Hunt is always drunk and he
openly lives with three coolie women. He is fascinated by Leila’s “slim young body
defined by the narrow girth of her skirt and the fine stretch of her bodice, her whole
demeanor like a bird that would flutter in the hands of the shikari” (TLB 121). It
shows the lustful character of Raggie. He asks her to come to his Bungalow as if it
is his right. Leila knows about his lustful behaviour. Leila refuses and enters her
hut. Reggie follows and seduces her. Buddhu, her brother is frightened and shouts
to his father to rescue Leila. Gangu arrives and tries to save his daughter from
Reggie. Reggie tries to escape but out of fear and frustration, Reggie Hunt fires
Gangu resulting in the death of Gangu. The murder is followed by a trial which lasts
for three days. Mr.Justice Mowberley and a jury of seven European and two Indian
members find that Reggie Hunt was not guilty on the charge of murder. He is
gross violation of labour and human rights. They are deprived of their basic rights
as workers, they don’t have basic facilities. After Independence, seeing the pathetic
117
condition of the plantation labour in the country, the Parliament of India passed the
Plantation Act, 1951 (PLA). Under this Act, the socio-economic development was
assigned to the tea management companies who employ the labour for their
production. It regulates the working and living conditions of these workers and
prescribes standards for housing, healthcare and education. The PLA lays down
rules regarding maximum working hours, overtime payments, child labour, paid
leave and sickness and maternity benefits. But in spite of Government rules and
regulations, still the majority of labourers are deprived of these basic rights. Anand
creed and the problems of labourers. Anand fights for the betterment of labourers
through The Big Heart. Like other novels, this novel too exposes the burning social
problems of India to the world; so that the problems and sufferings of labourers
would force the authorities to uplift the society. Anand writes about the purpose of
this novel in Mulk Raj Anand: Author to Critic: Letters of Mulk Raj Anand to Saros
Cowasjee :
I wrote this novel at the end of World War II in London when the
was convinced that if India also went the same way, after freedom,
industrialists. But they decisively wreck the Indian rural economic structure like the
British Manufacturers who invaded India. The British rule in India decimated
traditional unity of agriculture, spinning wheel and handloom with the introduction
of machines. Science and technology laid the foundation for India’s industrial
compared to monstrous animals and devils – ‘many headed, many armed chuckling
solution to the problem of caste conflict whereas in Two Leaves and a Bud and The
Big Heart he shows it as the cause of conflict. It becomes the tool of exploitation of
the working class. It eventually leads to sharpen the social stratification. Machines
are the ruthless means of exploitation of the poor by the rich. Anand wants to expose
all these social ills in The Big Heart as an appeal to the Indian society to have
The Big Heart presents the basic conflict between the traditional labourers
and the machines. It depicts a conflict between a class of artisans and a class of
capitalists. In this novel, Anand has attempted to give a whole social, economic and
political picture. It demonstrates both the positive and negative sides of modern
social life. Like Untouchable, the novel narrates the events in the life of a
English , “A single day’s events are chronicled in the novel, but the tempo increases
steadily hour by hour and sparks in the air and there is rumbling thunder in the
worked in Bombay and Ahmedabad. Ananta is closely modelled after people Anand
had known in his childhood. He takes characters from contemporary life who have
center of Amritsar has changed very much since the ‘age of truth’,
except that the shadow of the tall clock tower built by the British,
falls across it from two hundred yards away, and an electric bulb
the lane. But of course, a lot of water has trickled through its open
drains since the ‘age of truth’: the pure holy water (if it ever was
pure!) of the ceremonies of the ‘age of truth’ ; the dirty water of the
‘Middle Ages’; the slimy, asafoetida water of the ‘iron age’ and many
other waters besides. The fact about water, like time, is that it will
flow: it may get choked up with the rubbish and debris of broken
banks; it may be arrested in stagnant pools for long years; but it will
begin to flow again as soon as the sky pours down its blessing to
make up for what the other elements have sucked up; and it will keep
The setting of the novel clearly exposes the conflict between the modern
begins to change India dramatically. But this progressive era brought dramatic
changes to the nation’s economic, political and social sectors. As Anand describes it
realistically:
120
Apart from the usual mouth, which even a ‘cul-de-sac’ keeps open, it
has another which makes it really like a two-headed snake. With one
head, it looks towards the ancient market, where the beautiful copper,
brass, silver and bronze utensils made in the lane are sold by dealers
called Kaseras, hence called the Bazar Kaserian. With the other it
wriggles out towards the new Ironmongers’ Bazar, where screws and
bolts and nails and locks are sold and which merges into the Book-
seller’s mart, the cigarette shops and the Post Office replete with the
The iron-mongers’ bazar represents the machine, while the bazaar Kaserian
typifies the conventional way of life. The items available in the bazaar Kaserian are
copper, brass, silver and bronze utensils. They are made by village artisans. They
are mainly used in kitchen. But the items sold in Iron-mongers’ Bazaar are full of
a significant role in the advancement of humanity. Society is the base for tradition.
is also modified. The spirit of reform and revolt gives way to modernity. So
making a living of his own. The introduction of the machine has thrown the artisans
qualities such as deep concern for human beings living in misery, starvation and
readiness to extend any help to them. He is convinced of the absolute need for unity
121
coppersmiths. He is ready to fight for the welfare of the labour. To fight against the
factory owners is not easy. The collective efforts and well organized trade unions
help to find the exploitation of labourers. As the protagonist of the novel, Anantha
children were set to work for a few coppers, so Puran Singh Bhagat
tells me – Angrezi women and children, brothers. And there was such
deaf to the cry of the victims of poverty. . . . But the working men of
Vilayar themselves took their destiny in their own hands and banded
and struggled and struggled until today there are few working men
and women in factories who are not members of the union. They
conditions, for holidays with pay, and defend their rights by strike
“Mechanization is good when the hands are more hands than required for the work
as the case in India” (Sarasvathi 103). But Anand believes that mechanization and
changes in the society. It is thus at the very centre of modern economic growth.
Ananta is compassionate towards the poor and the helpless. When he returns
from Bombay, he brings with him Janki a young widow. She is suffering from
For the rogue and scoundrel that he was to the elders of the thathiar
community, he was the idol of the youth of the craft. Partly it was
the casual dignity of an animal who did not need to throw his weight
about. Also there was the air of the rebel about him, the man who
train than anyone else in the neighbourhood. And there was his large
endeared him to those whose impulses were yet free from all
Therefore Ananta is a man with the big heart. He chooses to live with Janki who is
But he tries to break down all the conventional norms of caste and religion.
standard of living. It is better to accept the machines and enjoy its benefits. It may
He advises his fellow coppersmith. “I tell you the machine is in our midst
already, there! And we have got to decide to go and work it rather than sulk”
( BH 84).
a factory with the help of Lala Murli Dhar, the headman of the thathiar coppersmith
coppersmiths. This factory manufactures war tools. Many thathiars have been
rendered jobless because of the introduction of the machine. Ananta tries to gather
all the jobless coppersmiths into a union. So that they can demand their jobs. They
are thrown out of their hereditary profession. The machines deprive them of their
fundamental rights.
Ralia, a reactionary who opposes the advent of the machine age, mimics a
wild caricature of the movement of machines and raves, “Yes, may I rape the mother
124
of the machines. . . . They roar and they spit” (BH 33). Ralia thinks that the
craftsmen will break under the heavy weight of these machines. He believes in his
dharma which says that ‘this Vilayati mixture of iron and leather is evil’ (BH 35).
He gives many reasons for rejecting the machine. Mahasha Hans Raj condemns the
‘machine – ridden India where they are threatened by those who want to reproduce
Satyapal, a student leader, condemns the British government for flooding the
country with the instruments of destruction. He says “At first they brought railways,
telephones and telegrams. Now they are bringing that engine of death, the
aeroplane” (BH 37). He accuses the British government of doing all this for their
profits. He holds that Murli Dhar and Gokul Chand are the staunch supporters of
power wants to mechanize the very soul of man to produce machine-men. Viroo
Mal too thinks that they will be strangled by these devil machines. The people are
afraid that the machines will spell doom. They say that the teaching of Mahatma
However, Ananta, ‘the machine man’, holds that it is no use blaming the
machines as the important question is who the master of those machines is. Janki,
Ananta’s beloved, is not sure whether those machines ‘The toys of Shaitan’ are not
You don’t understand that when one is married off to a girl and she
brings a bed in her dowry with her, one does not refuse the bedstead
machines she has brought and make use of them, provided we keep
125
our hearts and become the masters. Machines don’t think or feel, it is
Anand shows how the men in the town are torn between the uses of machine
– whether to hail its advent or to scrap it and go back to the age of the spinning
wheel. The bulk of men rooted in the womb of custom oppose it, while ‘big hearts’
like Ananta greets it with warm-heartedly. They wish to become masters of their
destiny. Ananta jocularly says that he wishes to persuade the Municipal Committee
to lay down gas pipes or electric power so that his beloved’s ‘green cat eyes could
between Indian women, trapped in the airless kitchens of the old houses and the
women of Europe who have been released from the dark prisons. He says to Janki,
If you think of those things, you would prefer to use the gas or
which boils water, I am sure you would have got our tea ready long
before the time it has taken you to light the fire. (BH 42)
Ananta knows that a revolution by a union will be the right option against the
capitalist. He pleads with the jobless coppersmiths for an organized action, so that
their rights will be recognized. The workers strike in front of the factory gate
demand work for them. Ananta is aware of the futility of violence. He alarms the
workers that revolution should not be a destructive force. The workers are frustrated
because their pleas do not reach the factory owners. They get lured by the words of
Sathyapal, a leader of student union and Prof. Mehjid. Ralia, a drunkard and friend
of Ananta. Relia starts to destroy everything. Ananta tries to stop him but in vain.
In the struggle. Ralia strikes Ananta’s head against a broken machine and kills him.
126
The poet Puran Singh Bhagat says that the death of the old order and the birth of the
Industrialization has given a modern society and factories to the working class.
developed country. The historical facts reveal that all the developed countries of the
the country. It helps in increasing the quantity and quality of various kinds of
worker. The income of the labour due to higher productivity increases. The rise in
income raises the living standard of the people. Industrialization is the best way of
providing economic stability to the country and it brings structural changes in the
manufactured goods and thus earns foreign exchange. It stimulates progress in other
workers of agricultural sector and thereby increases the income of the community.
tractors, thrashers, harvesters, bulldozers, aerial spray etc, to be used in the farm
sector. The increased use of modern inputs has increased the yield of crops per
hectare. The increase in the income of the farmers has given a boost to the economic
127
development in the country. The industrial activity is easy to control compared with
agricultural. The industrial production can be expanded or cut down according to the
cost price and demand of the product. Industrialization provides larger scope for on
the job training and technological progress. The use of advanced technology
increases the scale of production, reduces cost of production, improves quality of the
product and helps in widening of the market. Industrialization increases the income
of the workers. It enhances their capacity to save. The voluntary savings stimulate
country is industrialized, it can manufacture arms and ammunition necessary for the
defence of the country. A nation which depends on other countries for the supply of
ammunition will eventually suffer and may face defeat. With the development of
industries the market for raw materials and finished goods widens in the country. All
because of the machine. Due to industrialism, the old order becomes obsolete in a
country like India. It may oppress the workers. It is necessity for the progress and
organized trade unions. The unions should fight for the welfare of the labour force.
solidarity and fraternity can come only through a knowledge of labour rights.
Two leaves and a Bud is also an articulation of the absence of labour rights
which destroys families of coolies. In this novel the protagonist is not rebellious but
128
is given courage to lead the march of labourers. Labour and human rights violations
have been extensively documented through the novel Two Leaves and a Bud.
Exploitation and oppression are the ruling forces here. As Premila Paul observes in
When Munoo is abused by the shopkeeper his feeling is hurt, but yet
backs. (35)
Though his instincts make him lead the march his experience makes him surrender
to the exploiters. Through the novels Anand shows that the capitalistic exploitation
of labourers has become more dominant than the caste system in the Indian society.
Though the capitalists profit by millions of rupees through the tea plantations they
do not provide even the basic amenities to the workers. Anand shows the cruelty of
the estate owners through the stories of the coolies in the tea plantation. They do not
hesitate to kill those who try to escape from their prison-like place. They do not
permit the coolies to form their trade unions. Neither do they allow the leaders of
the trade union outside to visit the tea estates. They do not allow reporters to enter
so that their partiality could not be revealed. When Anand was criticized for
exaggerating the colonial exploitation in the Assam tea estates, Saros Cowasjee
defended him by stating that most of the facts are based on the Report of Royal
English planters and the hardship of the labourers. Anand used the Report of Royal
Commission of Labour as a launching pad to register his strong protest against the
violation of labour rights and the result is the creation of these two novels.
Chapter -IV
Women’s Rights in The Old Woman and the Cow and Seven Summers
Women are often the subject of literary works, seen as an object to behold or
an earthly link to God. However, early British literature, the image of women is
characters extends past the physical beauty and sexuality of the sex, and literature
throughout the Middle Ages, their image is also associated with superficiality and
temptation; a majority of male writers portray women in the role of man’s downfall,
societal norms and the cause of the downfall of man. In the old English Tradition,
women are seen as either dutiful woman or angelic creatures from heaven.
he too portrays his women as temptations, week and powerless. Within his plays,
the female form is frail and weak, as in Hamlet; or manipulative and ambitious as in
Macbeth. Yet they are romantic and innocent, like Ophelia and Juliet, but easily led
astray by their emotional desires. In the framework of his sonnets, the female form
is parodied and masked. Shakespeare makes light of the perfection that is insisted
upon by his contemporaries and of the ideals that are held within the court of Queen
Elizabeth.
130
and not heard, but in literature, the women excel their historical counterparts and
Since early times women have been uniquely viewed as a creative source of
human life. However, historically they have been considered not only intellectually
inferior to men but also a major source of temptation and evil. In Greek Mythology
Pandora was the first female person ever created by the Greek gods. Zeus, the King
of the gods, ordered Hephaestus, the blacksmith, to create a female human form out
of earth and water and to make her look as beautiful as the gods. All Olympian gods
contributed to the creation of her appearance and personality, both in positive and
negative ways. But it was this woman, Pandora, who opened the forbidden box and
brought plagues and unhappiness to mankind. Pandora was the source of all human
ills and misfortunes. The Greeks regarded woman as a sub-human creature whose
Romans were the next to achieve glory and greatness after the Greeks. The
Romans’ social traditions recognized man as the chief of the family unit, possessing
full authority and power over the members of his family. So much so that he could
take the life of his wife. The Roman concept about the position of the woman
underwent a serious change. Rules and regulations, governing marriage and divorce
and the structure of the family system gradually changed. But the Roman women
forever inferior to men. Christian theology too perpetuated these views. Their basic
doctrine was that woman was the mother of sin and root cause of all evils. She was
the primary cause of stimulating man towards sin and corruption and thus led him to
hell and all human ills and troubles emanated from her.
131
The colonial rule, patriarchal practices and traditions enhance the ideology of
female subordination which has resulted in the rise of ‘feminism’ in 1960s. The
central theme, therefore, is the emergence of ‘new woman’ in the fast changing
hopelessness and anxieties in their novels. Their basic concern is with the issue of
women’s liberation. It seems that the Indian women novelists have taken up the
demand for the equality in the enjoyment of all fundamental human rights -- moral,
feminism, they all advocate feminism as is rightly said by Naresh K. Jain in his book
in Indo-Anglian novels coped with change in their lives and with the rival pull of
tradition and modernity in their search for identity, independence, fulfilment and
If a woman has to establish a true identity of her own, she must comply with
the economic, socio-political and cultural barriers imposed upon her by various
forces since time immemorial. They must attempt to redefine the dominant
from their child hood are made to learn how to compromise and adjust with
secondary role. Adolescent stage makes them think that their desires will be
fulfilled in their marriages for they look at marriage as a solution to their problems.
But in reality, marriage shatters all their dreams and they suffer miserably in their
marital life. Sometimes, they are in a dilemma, this confusing situation compels
132
them sometimes, they take up a bold step of understanding the married home which
is a major deviation from the established traditional norms. The writers portray the
marginalized to the extremely modern and liberated. The variety of women depicted
in their writings brings out the different ways in which these women are subjugated
to male hegemony. The novelists also show the types of protests registered by these
hopeless and suffocated, try to adjust themselves to the social system prescribed by
that women enjoyed an equal status with men in ancient India. It is said that women
were educated, had a say in family matters, took important decisions in family and
were free to choose their own husbands. The ancient system of “Swayamvara” is
mentioned in Holy Scriptures and also in many epics. A woman in ancient India was
respected and was given due importance in the society. The Vedas glorified woman
as the mother; the creator, one who gives life and worshipped her as Goddess. Much
of the ideal role of women can be ascertained from the images of a maiden and bride
in the Rig Veda. A daughter and maiden were praised for the characteristics of
beauty, radiance, appealing adornment, sweet odours, ample hips, and broad thighs.
the young girl. At festival gatherings, young virgins met eligible men, with
flirtatious coupling after initiating a relationship. They then turned to their parents
for approval and marriage arrangements were made. To be a virgin bride was of
paramount importance. Practical advice was given to the new bride such as not to be
angry or hostile to her husband, to be tender, amiable, glorious, and mother of sons.
133
A woman’s role as outlined in Hinduism at this time was to be a good wife so that
the gods and goddesses would respond to the couple’s requests and needs. The
Laws of Manu, India’s most famous early legal code, was compiled over the years
between B.C.200 – B.C.400. While the position of women in early Vedic India had
been good, these laws illustrate the efforts of the Brahmin elite to restrict women’s
legal independence.
practised a form of ancestor worship, whereby the oldest male was responsible for
conducting the rites on a regular basis at home. It was the eldest son’s responsibility
to light his parents’ funeral pyre. Women could not serve as Brahmin priests or
study the sacred Vedas. Courtesans and prostitutes were part of ancient Indian
certain facets became dominant: the caste system, karma, dharma, and reincarnation.
India’s caste system has four main classes: Brahma, kshatriya, vaishya, and shudra
and women were represented in all of them. Caste determined whom people could
associate with, and who they could marry. It determined even their diet. In certain
cases a man was allowed to marry a woman of a lower caste, but a woman should
not do such a thing without disgracing her family and defiling herself. The early
she did not do enough good in their life time or if they did not do their duty or karma
in a proper manner. Such was the inferior status of woman in the early society.
The freedom given to woman was curtailed gradually and she was not
allowed to voice her opinions in all matters in society. Polygamy began to increase
and child marriage came into practice. Daughters were considered to be a burden
and they were reduced to doing the chores of household. Sati, an ancient practice in
134
which a widow had to lie beside her husband’s pyre, and be burnt to death came into
vogue. Women were tortured and humiliated and their condition degraded. The
Thus the status of women in India has seen many ups and downs. In the Vedic Age
B.C.1500- B.C. 1000, they were worshipped as goddesses. In the Muslim age 1026-
1756 AD, their status suffered a sharp decline and in the British regime they were
Woman was always looked down upon morally as well as socially and she had no
legal rights. Throughout the history, women generally have had fewer legal rights
The present chapter examines the treatment of women rights in Mulk Raj
Anand’s The Old Woman and the Cow and his other novels .The emphasis on the
innumerable social, political and religious evils. The nation was under the
suppressing yoke of foreign rule. The British rulers subjected the poor Indian to
slavish, subhuman existence. The rigid class and caste structure of India also caused
The novelists are primarily concerned with the predicament of the Indian
society. The novelists have exploited their skills in projecting convincingly the
agonized mind of the woman. Their keen observation of the life of the Indian
135
women and their interest in the study of their inner mind are evidenced by their
vivid portrayal of their plight. They focus on the existential predicament and the
traditions and restrictions. Most of the Indian women living in an orthodox family
feel inhabited to raise their voice against the aggressive dominance of the male
persons owing to their inferior position made to feel by the rigid code of conduct
imposed upon them. Since India has been a tradition-bound nation, its women are
also shackled by numerous social and religious customs and conventions that bind
motivating primal force – Shakti protecting good and destroying evil – woman as
the chaste, suffering wife, woman as charmer --are some of the facets frequently
depicted in literatures. The image of woman in Anglo Indian novel is complex and
multifaceted. The view about Indian women is biased by racial and imperialistic
prejudices. Indo-Anglian fiction was the inevitable outcome of the Indian exposure
to western culture and art forms like the novel. Indo-Anglian as well as Indian
novels reveal a struggle of the Indians to coordinate the divergent cultures of the
East and the West in the image of the woman. Sexually, she is shown as the
the family and explores the reasons behind the traditional view. The same
movement towards realism shows up in Indo Anglian fiction with Mulk Raj Anand,
Raja Rao, R.K.Narayan, Kamala Markandaya, and others, who turned their
attention to the realistic problems of the poor people particularly, the treatment of
women.
136
Mulk Raj Anand’s contribution to the Indian English fiction of social realism
any other Indian English novelist. His depiction of north Indian rural and feudal
for the creation of a number of character types which are indigenous to Indian
society. The subtle transition of Indian society in all its dimensions from decade to
decade in the early part of the twentieth century has been captured by Mulk Raj
always articulated his sympathy for the oppressed women. There is a reason to
depict the life of a rural Indian woman whose tragedy is multi-dimensional and
The woman in Mulk Raj Anand’s work is an important part at its core.
woman is suppressed in India, Mulk Raj Anand is aware of her dormant capacities
which are seen in some of his women characters. Woman, according to Anand’s
out of the four walls of home. In fact it needs to be recognized that woman is as
Anand’s best novel Untouchable provides valuable insight into the life of
the girl Sohini. Though Bakha is at the core of the novel and Sohini is viewed from
the outside, she comes off very much alive. She appears meek, patient and
courageous even more than her brother, and she does not lose her composure in the
midst of squalor and her father’s carpings. She has to suffer insults from morning to
night. She listens silently to her father’s carping at home as she lights the fire,
137
sweeps, makes tea and clears the hut. When Sohini goes to sweep the temple port
yard, a priest tries to molest her. But at her denial he starts shouting “polluted!
Polluted!”. Sohini is a lower class woman, that is why she always suffers insults and
taunts.
Anand’s next novel Coolie portrays Laxmi, the wife of Hari, a coolie who
lives in subhuman surroundings, but she stands by her husband in the face of
extreme poverty and hardship without questioning him. Anand says of Lakshmi:
And whether she was still too innocent of suffering or whether her
light in theory, black eyes that matched the rich brown of her checks,
enhanced by the little gold point of the ring in her small nose, and
‘dusky hue’ as is obsessed with the longing to become ‘pukka’ English and is torn
between the fear of sin and the fascination that sex held for her. She flirts with the
servant boy Munoo too. She wonders, “Why didn’t the world understand . . . how a
hundred different mode? What right had people to judge one?” (293).
Anand has stressed the pitiable condition of the woman Janki in The Big
Heart who is a widow, then Ananta’s mistress. After the death of her elderly
husband, the society expects her to be dead to all impulses and live only to worship
the memory of him. Fortunately she meets Ananta who cares her with great
after his death. Janki is impressed by the ‘spiritual guide and mentor’ Paran Singh’s
talk. She accepts the remaining part of her life as a challenge and sets out to sant
138
Harnam to live with and for others and to organize women comrades for a
revolutionary life. The enormity of the wrongs she has suffered does not bow her
down.
In short Mulk Raj Anand combines the reality with the ideal in his
victim of the economic and social oppressive forces which relegate her to a
rights in his novels, it is important to discuss the women rights and women
emancipation.
The concept of women’s rights came into being when some individuals
began to experience a chronic imbalance in gender relations and to realize that the
unequal power – sharing between men and women is not actually an innate fact of
and radical. But in course of time, the victim of discrimination is able to carefully
certain terms and concepts that are specifically associated with them. In the field of
that have worked against women – the anger or Madonna versus the virago or
monster – or the dichotomous stereotypes that have categorized men constituting the
centre and women merely forming the margin of an essentially patriarchal social
structure. We cannot ignore the clichéd binaries that have characterized the
depiction of the male and the female as the self and the other; as the active and the
passive entitles, as the reasonable and the passionate beings and so on.
139
The Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) affirms that all human
beings are born with equal rights. The charter of the UN, which was adopted in 1945
by 51 states, provides the foundation of the international human rights system. Both
the charter and the UDHR that was subsequently drawn up recognize that all human
beings have human rights for the simple reason of being a human. The charter
forbids discrimination on the basis of race, sex, language or religion. The UDHR
lays down that everyone is entitled to enjoy all the rights and freedoms set forth in
this Declaration, without distinction of any kind, including sex. The Declaration
speaks purposefully to all human beings, when it holds in Article1 that all human
beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights. Men and women should be able
to enjoy their human rights on an equal basis. The Universal Declaration of Human
Rights, 1948 proclaims ‘it applies to all human beings unconditionally without
distinction or any kind such as race, colour, sex, language or other status’
(UDHR.1948, Article 2)
right to work, right to equal pay for equal work, right to just, and favourable
remuneration, right to form trade unions, right to rest and leisure, right to adequate
standards of living and well-being of the family, the right to education etc.
Women’s rights are the economic, social and cultural freedoms to which all
women are entitled. For women to realize their rights, they must have equal access
to resources and opportunities and equal treatment in economic and social life. In
many parts of the world, women are not treated on an equal basis with men and are
denied their basic freedoms because they are women. The worth of a civilization can
be judged only from the position that it gives to women. Women constitute half of
the global population, but they are placed at various disadvantageous positions due
140
to gender difference and bias. They have been the victims of violence and
The women’s rights are natural and inherent. There is a struggle to protect
and promote women’s rights. This struggle is as old as human civilization. The
women’s rights emerged as a distinct aspect of human rights during the international
documents are now used as tools to protect women. One is the Convention for the
The second treaty is the Declaration on the Elimination of Violence Against Women
concern when the UN General Assembly adopted the convention on the Elimination
agreement that affirms principles of fundamental human rights and equality for
basis, forming an important bill of rights for women worldwide. It paves the way
for women’s participation in political economic and social life. It is also the only
human rights treaty which affirms the reproductive rights of women, and targets
culture and tradition as influential forces shaping gender roles and family relations.
It leads women to contribute fully towards the creation of a better world – to live a
life free from violence and discrimination to be educated, to work, to be healthy, and
the United Nations reaffirms faith in fundamental human rights, in the dignity and
worth of the human person and in the equal rights of women. All distinctions,
women of human rights and fundamental freedoms are prohibited by the convention
requires the member states to abolish all customs, traditions and religious practices
that discriminate against women. Thus CEDAW seeks to uphold and strengthen a
trafficking in women, forced prostitution etc. The main cause of violence against
traditional attitudes of the society that assigns a lower status to women. The
General Assembly on Violence Against Women, the Vienna Declaration 1993, the
1979 etc., condemn violence against women. The 1994 International Conference on
Population and Development and the 1994 Programme of Action also recognise the
need to eliminate violence against women. “Women’s rights are human rights” is a
popular slogan used by the women’s rights movement at the 1993 world conference
the UN General Assembly which defines violence against women as “any act of
education by 2015. The UNMD plans to achieve the eight anti-poverty goals and the
announcement of major new commitments for women’s and children’s health and
other initiatives against poverty, hunger and disease. The goals of Millennium
Development are:
Development Goals)
It was initiated in 2005 by the then Secretary-General Kofi Annan, the MDGs form
due to the efforts of many writers. Even before the UDHR, the early writers
attempted to assert women’s rights. Therefore women are often the subject of their
literary works. Women’s movements influence the literary arena too. Women’s
143
rights movements are primarily concerned with making the political, social and
economic status of women equal on par with men and with establishing legislative
safeguards against discrimination on the basis of sex. Feminist ideas and social
international context that promoted the migration of people and ideas across national
boundaries. Women’s movements have worked in support of these aims for at least
two centuries.
the Rights of Women. It is a treatise on overcoming the ways in which women in her
time were oppressed and denied to use their potential for the betterment of society.
This work has been written particularly for their improvement of female rights. The
out her view that neglect of girls’ education is largely to blame for the condition of
adult women. They are treated as subordinate beings that care only about being
attractive, elegant, and meek; they buy into this oppression, and they do not have the
tools to vindicate their fundamental rights or the awareness that they are in such a
the author takes up the position that oppression of the opposite sex is fundamentally
wrong:
the two sexes, the legal subordination of one sex to the other is wrong
Mill’s belief in the equality of the sexes is consistent with his larger arguments on
English. Her work provides an invaluable insight into both her own life experience
and those of women at the beginning of the twentieth century. She examines
women’s historical experience as well as the distinctive struggle of the woman artist.
Woolf challenges the patriarchal system that allows a man to choose any livelihood
he desires, but often requires a woman to live her life in full support of his enterprise
Kate Millet is an American feminist and activist. Millet was the first to
define and bring focus to the term “Sexual Politics”. Her work is seen in three parts:
Sexual politics, its historical background, and the literary reflection of such politics.
Millett’s book paved the way for the 70’s feminism. She insisted that social and
Second Sex. It is one of the attempts to confront human history from a feminist
to men. Man occupies the role of the self, or subject; woman is the object, the other.
mutilated. He extends out into the world to impose his will on it, whereas woman is
145
doomed to immanence or inwardness. He creates, acts, invents; she waits for him to
academic literary articles. Showalter is renowned for her pioneering feminist studies
generated a powerful new concept and context for the advancement of women’s
rights.
In India, one of the major features of the late nineteenth and early twentieth
century has been the interest evinced in the under-privileged which was reflected in
the literature of the period. The nineteenth century is a very important period in the
determined to reform Indian culture, society and religion. They sought inspiration
from Vedas and Upanishads. They were also influenced by western scientific
thoughts. The Hindu leaders kike Raja Ram Mohan Roy, Debendranath Tagore,
Saraswathi, Swami Vivekananda and a host of others set out to reform Hindu
religion and society. They condemned the evils and abuses that had crept into
Hinduism: the reality of caste system, sati, child marriage, unsociability, idol
worship, polytheism, etc. They wanted to purge Hinduism of all these social evils
and thus restore its pristine purity and ancient glory. They tried to give a new life to
the decadent contemporary society. This ideology of social change was shared by
the litterateurs and fiction writers in almost all the Indian languages turned their
phenomenon which India shared with many other countries. Both Gandhi and Marx
were driven by opposition to imperialism and concern for the dispossessed sections
by some expatriate writers in London, like Mulk Raj Anand. However, soon it
became a great pan-Indian movement that brought together Gandhian and Marxist
insights into society. The movement was conspicuously absent in Urdu, Punjabi,
Bengali, Telugu and Malayalam speaking regions but its impact was felt all over
India. It compelled every writer to reexamine his/her relationship with society and
its reality. In Hindi, Chhayavad was challenged by a progressive school that came to
powerful and noted Hindi poet of the progressive group. The Bengali poets, Samar
Sen and Subhas Mukhopadhyay, added a new socio-political outlook to their poetry.
Fakir Mohan Senapati (Oriya, 1893-1918) was the first Indian novelist of social
realism. Rootedness to the soil, compassion for the wretched, and sincerity of
expression are the qualities of the novels of Senapati. Manik Bandyopadhyay is the
most well-known Marxist Bengali novelist. Malayalam fiction writers like Vaikkom
Muhammed Basheer, S.K. Pottekkat and Thakazhi Sivasankara Pillai, made history
by writing progressive fiction of high literary value. They explored the life of
ordinary men and the human relations that economic and social inequalities fostered.
Shivaram Karanath, the most versatile fiction writer in Kannada, never forgot his
early Gandhian teachings. Sri Sri (Telugu) was a Marxist, but showed interest in
modernism at a later stage in his life. Abdul Malik, in Assamese, wrote with an
ideological bias. The critical norms of progressive literature are established by the
pioneer of this phase in Punjabi by Sant Singh Sekhon. The progressive writers’
147
movement attracted the attention of eminent poets of Urdu, like Josh Malihabadi and
Being a social critic, Anand could not ignore women. Anand uses literature
as a means to modify society. His concepts of literature as closely related to life are
a by-product of human rights issues. He censures the primitive outlook of those who
treat women as slaves, mere child-bearing machines. He holds that the old notion
that woman is meant for the hearth has become outdated and irrelevant. Woman is
determination have set her free. Being a non-believer in the crotchet of the past,
Anand makes a strong plea for the recognition of women’s rights. Anand’s novels
are based on women’s issues. He explores the old Indian ‘womanhood’ concept and
condemns exploitations.
The fast changing new world demands the need for empowerment of women
and rights. As far as Indian English Literature is concerned, Anand has enjoyed
prominence to the boys of Indian families. The girls are presented as subordinate
creatures evoking the pity of the readers. In the early works, Anand has given a clear
account of the position and status of women in India. Therefore his later works
chiefly deal with women who belong to the grassroots level and are without the
boon of education. When Anand started writing, women were actively fighting for
equal rights around the world and eventually won the voting rights in 1920 in
America and in 1928 in England and in 1935 in British India. His novels are the
showcases of a wide variety of female characters from all classes. Even before the
convention of women’s rights, Anand propagandized the need for women’s rights.
148
The novel The Old Woman and The Cow is considered an example of asserting the
The Old Woman and the Cow, also known as Gauri (1960) is a unique novel
among Anand’s novels because the novel presents a woman as a central character
and projects a woman’s point of view. The first phase of the novel shows Gauri as a
gentle cow, suffering at the hands of her mother-in-law and her husband. The second
phase presents Gauri who is driven out of her house and exposed to the world of
Hoshiarpur. In the last phase of the novel, Gauri returns home only to leave her
The Old Women and the Cow deals with the life of Gauri. It is in the words
of Anand, “my affirming to the beauty, dignity and devotion of Indian Woman”
(Gauri).
It must be noticed by the Indian readers that Anand has paid his artistic
homage to the Indian woman in this novel long before the feminist or woman’s
understand and delineate woman’s mind helps him gain a comprehensive knowledge
of human life. Far from being partisan or prejudiced, he has exercised his
hermaphroditic power of art and has delineated his protagonists’ plight in the
patriarchal society of India. Woman in the Indian society has to play the traditional
on. Gauri as depicted by Mulk Raj Anand fits into the category of the submissive
wife.
When Panchi the bridegroom rides his pony to the wedding place to the
accompaniment of Angrezi music, he tries to imagine his would-be wife, “for there
was the prospect of the prize of a girl. Whom he could fold in his arms at night and
149
kick during the day, who would adorn his house and help him with the work on the
land…” (OWC 11). He remembers how his parents-in-law kept up the constant
refrain during the negotiation that “Gauri is like a cow, very gentle” (OWC 11). The
metaphor of the cow easily brings to our mind the docility, sublimity, harmlessness,
virtue, holiness and such other properties attached to the animal in Hindu religion.
“Panchi felt like a holy bull going off to marry the cow Gauri” (OWC 13). The
metaphors of ‘holy bull’ and ‘cow’ easily bring out the contrast between the
Eventually, the marriage between Panchi and Gauri takes place in a typically
matrimonial procedure. Panchi is able to have the first look at his wife only after the
marriage when she is ceremonially received into his family. Gauri begins her
matrimonial life as a “do all” wife. She has obviously accepted all the norms of the
patriarchal society and therefore tries to conform to them as far as possible. She
But life is not as simple as she thinks. The familial as well as the societal
against Gauri to her husband and tries to intimidate him against her:
Control her, if you can . . . . This bride of yours! . . . . She has begun
to answer me now, when she was meek and obstinately silent before!
. . . . From the day that this witch from big Piplan set foot in our
house, we have had bad luck. You know the crops have withered and
burnt up. The bullocks have fever. And there is no sign of rain!
(OWC 37)
Thus bad luck begins to chase her at a very early stage of her married life.
150
misinterpreted by Kesaro: “I don’t like the visit to our home of Raj Guru and your
other friend, when you are not here . . . . And as usual her head was uncovered while
she was working!” (39). But Panchi is not ready to believe Kesaro’s interpretations
of her minor misdeeds and tries to clarify her doubt about Gauri’s behaviour by
telling her, “Chachi, Gauri had the reputation of being as gentle as cow in her
village” (38).
starvation. Having lost her mother and father early in life, she remembers them now
and then and weeps. A girl with such a background of emotional insecurity and
frustration is, obviously in need of a husband who can make her forget her past
worries by showering love and affection on her. But Panchi, although good by
Panchi’s rebellion against Mola Ram Kesaro and his decision to set up a
separate home are quite admirable. However Panchi cannot lead a carefree life as he
many people.
Gauri does not want to behave like Sita by accepting the defeat. She asserts
her identity by defying the irrational husband and society. She has grown from the
stage of docility to that of defiance in spite of being uneducated. “Her face shone
from the pressure of her stridden heart, transfigured from the gentle cow’s
acquiescent visage of the time when she had arrived in Panchi’s house, to that of a
woman with a will of her own” (OWC 244). She knows that she is carrying the child
of Panchi in her womb, but she cannot accept his high-handedness and atrocities any
151
longer. She wants to go to Dr.Mahindra’s hospital to deliver her child and lead an
independent life.
Anand reveals his concern for the woman in the society. G.S. Balrama Gupta
hints that “Anand’s principal objective in writing The Old Woman and the Cow is to
hint at the emergence of modern Indian Woman, and he achieves it admirably” (95).
The novel is replete with the essential concerns of women and the elements of
women’s rights.
The issue of woman’s place in a society is the central concern in the novel
The Old Woman and the Cow. In the Indian Society, a woman is looked upon either
appeal is to give women equal status with men. He censures the primitive outlook
of those who treat women as slaves, mere child-bearing machines. His early works
are dominated by men. Being the only woman protagonist in Anand’s fiction, Gauri
deserves special attention. He chooses his protagonists from the “dregs of humanity
and tries to identify them with the so-called high caste and high class people”.
(Arora viii)
Anand writes with the object of analyzing the status of women in the society.
The novel discusses the character’s feminine virtue of steadfastness in love and
loving concern for her husband. The Prologue speaks the purpose of the novel. It is
about the tradition of marriage. It begins with a marriage song about the bride,
Through the prologue, Anand presents the crux of the problem of woman in
attaining freedom. The position reveals that the Indian woman is generally extolled
as a Goddess and is given an exalted position but mostly pampered as a doll. Anand
reveals the paradoxical situation in the treatment of women. Gauri is not least
pathetic to note that she cannot see her fiancé before her marriage. It is a
conventionally arranged marriage. She feels that a change in the traditional role of
women is needed to achieve full equality between men and women. Gauri’s
men and women. The same right allows a woman freely to choose a
spouse and to enter into marriage only with their free and full
Like Gauri, women are often denied the right to choose the spouse. Consent
of the women to the marriage is often ignored in Indian society. The woman is
forced to marry according to the decisions of the parents or guardians. Gauri suffers
under several oppressive forces. Like Gauri, most of the women in villages of India
lead a tough, torturous and disconcerted life. They are the victims of a plethora of
forced marriage and dowry death. Victims of domestic violence are mainly women.
153
A woman is considered to be the sole property, first, of her father and brother, and
then of her husband and then her son and she does not have any will of her own.
The novel begins with the description of the incongruity of the tradition of
Hindu marriage.
The pony under Panchi bucked suddenly and, lifting its hind legs, swayed
and shook and nearly threw the bridegroom and his little cousin, Nikka, the
best man, off its back. Arrayed with the ceremonial garland of flower which
covered his resplendent pink turban and rich brown face. Panchi could not
even see what had frightened the pony so. As his hold on the reins had been
leisurely, throughout the three-mile journey from the village of Chota Piplan
Kalan, because the servant of Lala Birbal, who had rented out the pony, was
holding the pony’s reins near the bit, Panchi’s heart drummed and sweat
reaching Piplan Kalan, the groom’s party is given a formal welcome, but it is not
warm. They are belittled by Amru, the uncle of the bride for the small band they
have brought; “Look at the resplendent uniform of our own Akbar Shah’s
bandsman! Look! Oh, Look folks!” (OWC 11). Then comes an insinuation from
another more ‘cynical elder of Piplan Kalan, the shrewd, clean-shaven, sleek
goldsmith Kanshi Ram: “. . . they have brought a good dowry for our Gauri” (OWC
11). Finally when they reach the bride’s house, Panchi’s uncle, Mola Rama is
embarrassed when Amru embraces him as per the tradition, mentioning – the gold
plated jewellery with which people cheat each other at weddings “nowadays”. And
when Amru and Laxmi, the mother of the bride, come to know that they are cheated,
there is a big hue and cry. In a fit of fury Amru asks the pundit to stop gyrations
154
around the fire, who however does not oblige him. “The Old woman had hoped to
wangle enough cash to buy a buffalo to increase her dairy business” (OWC 19). She
feels cheated, and there is a mist of tears in her ‘gay-green’. However, soon she
reconciles to her fate saying she had given them to Gauri, the bride “in charity”.
through gold plated jewellery, the only concern that Laxmi and Amru have is for the
good dowry. Laxmi is more interested in purchasing a buffalo through the money
earned by the dowry than in the welfare of her daughter. She gives her daughter’s
hand to Panchi, in spite of the fact that he is “a God forsaken orphan”, “a goonda”,
and a show-off. In this way Anand looks at the issue differently, questioning the
institution of marriage. The beginning of the novel itself shows the pathetic plight of
society has attained alarming proportions over the last few decades. The dowry
well as less powerful in the economic exchange within the joint family system.
Wealth given to a daughter at her marriage for the couple to use as the
nucleus of their conjugal estate, by and large we can say that dowry in India
technically is her property and in her own control though the husband usually
has rights ofmanagement. (Qtd.in Brides are not for Burning: Dowry Victims
in India, Kumari 3)
155
India, the land of Gods, is respected in the world for her culture. People’s beliefs in
religions have made the Indians well-cultured. There are a few ugly practices that
stain the image of India. Dowry system is one of these much discussed practices.
stronger day by day. The horror of the dowry system has made the marriage
The bridegroom was voluntarily presented with some useful gifts. In some cases
bride’s father was offered money to allow her to marry a young man. Because the
bride was considered to be a virtuous and suitable one. The trend has now changed.
The parents of the girl desperately move in search of a suitable bridegroom for her
now. They persuade the groom’s parents and tempt them by offering money along
with dowry. Through these unfair means they get the consent of the groom’s parents
and culture. Poor people cannot afford dowry. Many beautiful and brilliant girls
remain unmarried because they are poor. Even after marriage, some brides are
tortured and forced to bring more and more dowry from their parents’ house. If they
fail, they are tortured and sometimes killed. Strict laws have been enacted to check
the dowry system. But many people do not abide by the laws. Rich people give
heavy dowry to their daughters. They do not feel unhappy at such crimes. Dowry
system continues in spite of all steps to check it. However, it can be completely
checked if the awareness against this system is created among the girls. If they vow
not to marry greedy men, if they become economically self-dependent, this ugly
Many social legislations are passed by the government of India. These laws
are designed to promote and protect the rights of women. The dowry system puts a
great financial burden on the bride’s family. It has been one of the reasons for
families and women in India resorting to sex selection in favour of sons. This has
distorted the sex ratio of India and has given rise to female foeticide. The payment
of dowry has been prohibited under the 1961 Dowry Prohibition Act in Indian Civil
Law and subsequently by section 304B and 498A of the Indian Penal Code (IPC). In
spite of that, the practice of giving and taking dowry and dowry deaths are rampant
in the Indian society. It is because of the lack of proper and effective enforcement of
Anand dramatically pictures the problem behind the dowry system through
Gauri: “Gauri is like a cow, very gentle” (OWC 11). This image of her continues to
inspire him throughout the novel. The tendency to dehumanize people by treating
them as objects or animals strongly correlates with the conventional attitude. The
traditional attitude of the society that assigns certain stereotyped roles to women,
such as domestic work, child bearing, taking care of husband etc., are factors
responsible for the inferior position of women. Therefore men expect the women to
be gentle. The society and family always fail to recognize the multiple roles played
by women in the family and outside the family. She is often denied the
The primitive and cruel attitude cause untold sufferings to Gauri. She
becomes a slave to Panchi’s desires and obliges him by submitting to his impatience
and narrow – mindedness without protest. Her duties are to cook, to clean and to
satisfy her husband sexually, whenever it seems right to him. Panchi thinks of the
prospect of the marriage. He says “there was the prospect of the prize of a girl – a
157
girl whom he could fold in his arms at night and kick during the day, who would
adorn his house and help him with the work on the land” (OWC 5). Women are not
treated nicely by men all through their life. They are denied their rights, their
When Gauri leaves her house, her mother Laxmi advises her “to be like Sita”
(OWC 8). This is a common phrase that women use in order to advise. The story of
Sita is derived from Indian epic The Ramayana in which Sita is banished by her
husband Lord Rama, because the villagers had begun to doubt her chastity. Here
Gauri symbolizes Sita. Gauri is instructed at the time of her marriage to live like
Sita. Throughout the novel, Gauri tries to approximate her life to Sita’s, the ideal
Hindu wife totally devoted to her husband. Thus social conditioning is the barrier to
the women community. Patriarchal Hindu society does not allow women to be
independent and grow fully as individuals bestowed with confidence. It closes all
the avenues for the development of their personality, and provides them a false
consciousness, and works always in favour of men. The innocent girl suffers at the
Panchi lives with his guardians uncle Mola Ram and aunt Kesaro. Gauri
steps into the realities of life where women are ill-treated by the family members.
Kesaro poisons Panchi’s mind against Gauri. Gauri tries to abide as ‘Sita’. Kesaro
and Panchi ill-treat her. They regard her as the incarnation of Kali. Panchi says: “my
aunt Kesari is right when she says this bride is the incarnation of Kali, the black
Goddess who destroys all before her, who brings famine in her beauty and lays bare
whole villages.” (OWC 33). The society violates the basic rights of women. The
atrocities against woman lead Gauri to rebel against society, Kesaro says: “Control
158
her, if you can! This bride of yours! She has begun to answer me now . . . from the
day that this witch from Big Piplanet foot in our house, we have bad luck” (OWC 9).
Anand questions the role of the ‘elders” in the village. The concept of
tradition is a very important source of asserting hegemony over people. The “Heads”
of Chota Piplan Kalan exercise their dominance over the villagers in the name of
respect for “elders”. “Our religion enjoins respect for elders” (OWC 9) tells
Subedhar Chaudri Achru Ram to Panchi when the latter quarrels with his Uncle
Mola Ram over the issue of his beating the bullocks of his uncle while ploughing his
Panchi and Gauri decide to live alone. Panchi tells his uncle that he would
take his things afterwards, but before that he wants to escape from his uncle’s vile
tongue. He signals to Gauri to get up and tells her his plans of shifting to Rajaguru’s
house. And at this proposal, Kesaro suddenly bursts out shouting “Hai, hai, son…
‘Do you want to lend your wife to the Subedhar’s son, blind one! Don’t you see that
already he has been coming and going here frequently and . . .” (OWC 42). Panchi
does not wait for any explanation from Gauri, but slaps her on head ‘once, twice,
thrice,’ until she falls on the bedstead again. Gauri becomes the victim of Panchi’s
thrashings for no fault of hers, but it serves as an outlet for all the pent up anger of
Panchi. He goes out in a huff for a walk, but when he returns he is remorseful of his
action.
It is important to note that most people in the village are “elders’ who snub
children and youth and women without any reason, and whatever that is convenient
tradition and such a concept allows the heads and the powerful people in the village
to justify their unjust actions. Panchi’s break up with the joint family and the
159
couple’s living in the Muslim house creates a big sensation in the village. Kesaro
further blames her going home without the dupptta on her forehead. Panchi slaps her
and she receives slapping without any protest. He justifies his beating thus: “. . . the
husband has to chastise his wife if she was wrong” (OWC 51). Violence is an
attitude that causes mental or physical injury and dehumanizes a person. It is true
that physical acts of violence can cause harm, but psychological and mental abuse
cause more harm to the mind of the woman. This type of treatment of woman
affects her right to live with human dignity. In 1983, domestic violence was
the Indian Penal Code. This section deals with cruelty by a husband or his family
the village. Very often Gauri is subjected to physical assault by her husband.
treated as a member of the family with warmth and affection and not as a stranger
impression should be given that she can be thrown out of her matrimonial home at
any time.
perception has given birth to various customs and practices. Violence against
160
women both inside and outside of their house has been a crucial issue in the
contemporary Indian society. Anand shows this social ill in his novel and thus he
has laid the foundation for womens’ rights in an age when women were not aware of
their rights.
Kesaro abuses Gauri calling her a whore from Piplan, filthy woman, sweeper
woman, shameless and so on. In the absence of Panchi’s mother (he had lost his
parents when he was a child) she acts like a ‘real mother-in-law’. The joint family
system invests a lot of power in the mother-in-law, and Kesaro uses her power as an
elderly woman in the family to spoil the happiness of the newly married couple. She
tells lies, or rather exaggerates things for Panchi against his wife. Panchi could not
show his love for her, because of the “vigil eyes” of her mother-in-law Kesaro.
Gauri knows that Panchi loves her very much. They enjoy happy days very often.
But though they did not eat together as husband and wife, they slept together
on one bed throughout the whole night, for the first time since they were
married, burning the eyes of Kesaro and the gossip of the neighbours that
This shows that the “elders” are a hindrance to the happiness of the newly
married. They do not tolerate the youngsters’ enjoyment of life. The phrase ‘burning
the eyes of Kesaro’ clearly indicates the kind of hegemonistic attitude of the ‘elders’
towards the young. Kesaro further poisons Panchi that Gauri is an inauspicious girl
who is responsible for all the calamities that fall on the village.
In India woman is not only understood as a sex object, but also as impure
because of her menstrual cycle. The moment a woman accepts that she is impure,
all in the name of tradition. Anand subtly brings in this question through the
portrayal of the dispute between Kesaro and Gauri. She victimizes Gauri for a
breach of the “stupid convention that forced women during their menstruation to the
corner as untouchables” (OWC 10). Though herself a woman, she does not look at
the problems of woman from the woman’s point of view. In India mothers-in-law,
often become agents of patriarchy in exercising power. They spoil the marital rights
When the drought persists and the crops fail, Panchi is made to believe that
the disaster was caused by Gauri’s evil star and sends her back to her mother, who
sells her to Seth Jai Ram Das from who she eventually escapes to colonel
Mahindra’s hospital. Dr. Batra’s advances send her to the colonel himself and when
he asks her what she wants, she has only one answer: “I want my husband… I am
with child by my husband, and I want to go back to him” (OWC 191). Gauri knows
that she is safe only when she lives with her husband.
One morning, Gauri reveals to Panchi very shyly that she is with child.
Panchi was not happy because he fears of fatherhood. Panchi is not excited at the
news of his becoming father but rather is worried of the hard reality of feeding
another mouth. The seeds of suspicion sown by Kesaro grow and flower in the mind
of Panchi. He madly kicks her and orders her to leave the house. He is influenced by
suspicion, but it is also the drought condition in the village, and his inability to feed
his wife and the child to be born that force him to send her away. Panchi accepts this
without any pretensions. “Go, go, get out of my sight. Go to your mother the whore!
She can perhaps earn enough to feed you and your brat. Your uncle Amru has the
Finally Kasaro instigates Panchi to drive her away. A woman has the right to
remain in the matrimonial home along with her husband as long as she is married. If
a woman is being pressured to leave the matrimonial home, she can move the Court
for an injunction or restraining order protecting her from being thrown out. This can
matrimonial home; it is easier to get a court order preventing a woman being thrown
out than to get an order enforcing her right to return to it once she has left or been
thrown out. There are many such “Gauris” even in the modern society who do not
know this right. They live in darkness. Anand’s earnest wish is that the “Gauris”
should come out of this darkness which enshrouds them. They should come to know
PiplanKalan. Laxmi is shocked to see her daughter in her house, and when she
comes to know that Gauri is sent out by her husband, she gets immensely worried.
She feels proud at her becoming grandmother, but is too scared to feed another
mouth in such times of poverty. She is all of motherly affection towards her
daughter, but is too scared of the responsibility of feeding Gauri. The old woman
cannot afford to support her daughter, because Chanderi, the cow which is the only
means of her survival is giving “less and less” milk. And the fact that the cow is in
the mortgage of Seth Jwala Prasad forces her not to accept any more responsibilities.
In such a situation she decides to keep the cow, and sell away the cow- like Gauri to
Seth Jai RamDas, the elder brother of Seth Jwala Prasad. She succumbs to the lure
of Seth who promises “. . . cash and the wiping out of the mortgage on their two
houses as well as the cow Chanderi” (OWC 108) in lieu of Gauri. Many times she
163
becomes remorseful, but the presence of Amru and the threat of Seth JwalaPradad to
Gauri hopes that she will be at peace in her mother’s house. But to her great
disappointment, the unlucky girl, is ill-treated there by her Step father Amru, who
thinks that girls are a curse. He arranges to sell Gauri to Seth Jai Ram Das, a lusty
aged banker of Hoshiarpur, in lieu of cash and other promises. Seth Jai Ram Das is
too glad to have Gauri in his house. To her dismay Gauri finds him “A man with full
white mustachio, pouches under the eyes, a caste mark on his forehead. . . . And a
heavy bare torso” (OWC 111). The first thing he does in their first encounter is to
irritate her with his pious speech. He is a widower and is too old to be married again.
As he cannot find a girl from his own caste, he buys this ‘hill girl’ to look after him.
As he tells Amru:
Since the death of the woman of my house, brother, I have not had a
thus the business is suffering! . . . Now, with this Bibi, by the grace
He calls her affectionally “Bibi”, but Gauri knows what he intends from her – “a
Mahindra, a humanist doctor takes pity on her and takes Gauri to his nursing
home. There too miseries follow her. Another doctor tries to molest her. However
Dr.Mahindra protects her from the lecherous doctor. He sends her back to her
husband. Rakhi, the wizened old evil-tongued midwife of the village casts
aspersions on her chastity. Instigated by Kesaro, Panchi disowns her doubting her
chastity. The vicious gossip about the paternity of the child drives her out. Gauri
164
Doubting her purity, Panchi disowns her, in the same way as Sita was
disowned by Sri Rama. Her stay in Colonel Mahindra’s hospital makes her
confident. The doctor trains her as a nurse. That confidence affirms the dignity of
drives her out of the house once again, his mind poisoned by
malicious village gossip. She does not, as she did earlier go out as
tells us, was found in the earth as a child, Gauri is truly the
daughter of the soil. But unlike her ancient counterpart, the modern
Sita does not need the earth to open up and swallow her; the
anonymous crowd of a big city can do the job equally well. The
modern Sita need not renounce life, but can be reborn into a life
richer and fuller. She need not vanish from the world; but can
Gauri looks forward to new self-dependent life. When women earn a living,
they are mentally strong and is sure of a bright future. Gauri decides to go to the
town. She knows that Dr. Mahindra will be there, and this reassures her. She will
go to him and live under the shadow of his protection and work as a nurse until the
birth of her child and the child would not be a coward like Panchi or as weak as she
165
has been. The novel clearly shows Anand’s plea for the upliftment of women
through asserting their rights. He is confident that a woman can enjoy her rights only
when she learns to earn her livelihood. Dependence on others makes an individual a
slave.
Rafigue Chacha, a potter, expresses Anand’s concern for the welfare of Muslim
impose it on the women! Our Mullahs and your Brahmins are the
hypocrites to lay down the laws, and the elders of the Panchayat of
every brotherhood support them. They are all fathers, squeezing out
the lives of the young ones with their dictates. However many
for the use of one man. There is a need for political empowerment of
gender and other relevant social, economic and political issues. (231)
166
The concept of equality, equity and non-discrimination on the ground of sex finds its
place in all international instruments dealing with human rights. Women are often
Gauri is sold by her uncle Amru to Seth Jai Ram Das.Her Uncle Amru tells
I must tell you that the bigger crime I have committed is not this; to
sell you to Seth Jai Ram Das, but to sacrifice you . . . . I have been
fond of you ever since you became a mature girl. I know that you will
(OWC 136)
Pandit Bhola Nath tries to seduce her. Seth also intends for the same and sanctifies
rape with holy verses showing deep devotion in religion. Seth tries to coax her with
valuable presents such as Benaras saree, jewellery and also reminds her that she
himself but when he thinks that, “this girl was young and her breasts were bursting
out of her tunic” (OWC 152), his desire becomes uncontrollable and he thrusts his
fascinated by Gauri that he quarrels with his wife and drives her away. Gauri lies in
Then, from somewhere below the torment in her belly there arose a
swirling wave, which made her eyes glisten in the dark. The young
doctor was not so undesirable. And he must want her badly to have
167
quarrelled with his wife. The vanity warned her cheeks, and suffused
her innocent body with the glow of pride. ‘But what are you thinking
her. And she closed her eyes and drew a curtain on her thoughts,
everything outside her, like a virgin rejecting all men. The shock of
the sudden passion did not die out so soon, however, and she turned
on her side and lay reclining on her breasts and belly, her will poised
against. The soft luxuriance of her body, until the inverted head
pressed down the waves of a white sleep on her eyelids. (OWC 162)
Thus Gauri does not want to fall into the web of an immoral world. She is frequently
assaulted by the merchant Seth Jai Ram Das and the young doctor Batra. She
undergoes every kind of harassment. But she has a strong moral sense, which
women like Gauri. Women in the workforce are increasing every year. This is
because of increased awareness, education and changing mind-set amongst men and
women due to financial constraints. But women in the workforce have not made an
impact on workplace environment for setting a code of conduct. Women are the
widely reported with many of the victims being working women belonging to nearly
all social sectors. Women in low-income groups, such as domestic workers are
Gauri rebels against the patriarchal set-up and chooses to live an independent
life. The story is set in an era immediately after independence. The character of
Gauri strongly projects the message that for women to gain self-respect, it is
necessary to protect them with legal rights. At the end of the story, Gauri makes her
own choice and leaves for Hoshiarpur, never to come back to Panchi again. Gauri
leads the Indian womanhood from tradition to modernity. The novel unfolds
Anand’s humanistic passion for the liberation of women from their bondage to
conventional society and dowry ridden family. Gauri emerges as a symbol of the
new womanhood who powerfully voices against the violation of women rights. She
consciously rebels against the Sita-image, tries to free herself and lives an
independent life. Gauri is “the story of a modern Sita who has at the end found a
new path for herself different from the one adopted by her mythic counterpart”
(Mathur 21). It is a powerful indictment of the brutal rigidity and authority of the
Hindu ethos. Anand has succeeded in the making of Gauri as Indian womanhood to
be a bridge that links tradition with modernity. Anand’s Gauri or The Old Woman
and the Cow “not only voices a strong protest against the ill- treatment of women
but also explores through the example of Gauri what woman in India should do for
The creation of a character like Gauri who achieves her true identity and
enumeration from the clutches of the suspicious husband is, indeed, a remarkable
literary achievement of Mulk Raj Anand in the Indian context. The concepts like
feminism and woman’s emancipation have become fashionable in India only in the
nineties. But Mulk Raj Anand presented a picture of such an emancipated woman
as early as in the sixties when the western ideas were not yet fashionable in India. It
educated and sick woman for emancipation is not equal to that of an uneducated,
poor woman. Gauri’s greatness lies in her struggle for emancipation in spite of
being poor and illiterate. She can be said to be an Indian version of Ibsen’s Nora.
None can fail to admire her gradual growth from docility through defiance to full
trained in the University of Adversity. She discovers her true identity by rebelling
against the false charges of adultery by her husband and the patriarchal society
thereby accepting the challenge of leading an independent life guided by her own
strong will. Thus, she succeeds in her fight with the preconceived notions of gender
roles and develops the existential courage to be herself. The character of Gauri
created by Mulk Raj Anand anticipates the creation of similar characters by the
recent writers like Anita Desai and Shashi Deshpande and a host of other women
In Seven Summers also, Anand presents the picture of the low status of
women in traditional Hindu society. Krishan’s mother recalls how she had slaved
for her mother-in-law from dawn till past midnight. Obedient and uncomplaining,
she suffered the beatings by her husband at his mother’s instigation. But she effaced
herself completely and bore every suffering patiently. “Be like Savitri” (SS 10), “be
like the suttees of the gurus, loyal to your husband unto death” (SS 12), had been her
father’s blessings. She had no voice in the selection of her future partner in life.
Her marriage had been arranged by her parents, because the parents were supposed
to look after the interests of their children better. Her mother had advised her to
serve her lord and master without any expectation of reward and live for the
happiness of having children and bringing them up. Her story represents the story of
Aqqi, Krishan’s aunt, has her own tale of sufferings to relate. Jai Singh, her
drunkard coppersmith husband, often beats her. When her husband turns her out,
she has to trudge all the way from the city to seek shelter with her sister. The
luckless lady begs for money from Krishan’s parents to enable her to set up an
licentious husband and is subjected to suffering by her cruel mother-in-law and the
law. Forgetting the ill-treatment she had herself received from her mother-in-law
and refusing to learn any lesson from her bitter past experiences, she advises
can’t wait while he finishes his college. Get him a job and give him to me” (SS 25).
She feels that Draupadi has outraged the limits of modesty by demanding openly.
Draupadi and Harish are the victims of an arranged marriage. The tradition –
bound society has pushed them together as life partners. Such ill-matched couples
can never hope to attain happiness. They are not allowed even to think of a divorce,
as there is no such provision in the laws of the Hindus. So the couple has to suffer
woman in search of a destiny that should transcend and not replace the domestic
round. His women are not satisfied with their society. None of the women in the
Anand has portrayed almost all the relations in a family: father, husband,
mother, wife, son , daughter , viz. He tries to break the image of mother as weak and
her “. . . we were to eat in uncle Pratap’s house; so father had said. Mother had
greeted this proposal in silence” (SS 34). She leads a dull and home bond life,
always immersed in domestic chores, unable to develop taste for a decent modern
way of living, which invites satirical remarks from her husband about the carpet
which Harish sent to them. Devaki has spread the carpet but the mother has kept it
“. . . in a bose so that the rats may eat it!” (MF 9) Father mocked. “You know that
your mother is not a pleasant woman for nothing. She likes to bundle up everything
and store it in the backroom!” (MF 11). Mother character is antithetical. While on
the one hand she silently acquiesces to the plans and mocking that her husband
makes and passes on her, on the other, she speaks up in satirizing the bad ways into
which Pratap has fallen: “To be some, Pratap must have pawned or sold all the old
family jewellery and spent the fortune already on the prostitutes!” (MF 11). She is a
judge of a character. Her explosive tongue ignites into smouldering remarks about
Devaki: “She drinks and plays cards and eats betel leaf” (MF 12). Another aspect of
her personality is that devotion to all types of God, saints and superstitions, it is to
meet either a woman with a picture or a sweeper with a broom while “he is on his
Though Krishnan has seeds of faithlessness to the would-be marital bed, his
seen in the mature masculine figures in the novel. A parallel personality on par with
Mumtaz is Dr.Chuni Lal’s Shakuntala. Even when she knows that his head is full of
172
boils, she kisses it and says “you will soon get will” (MF 415). Helen is another
Morning Face is a pendant to Seven Summers. Both the novels are intended
Mulk Raj Anand’s feminine perspective. Their love, not only brings salvation to
Krishnan, but leads him to real vocation. Through the women he attains a
heightened state of creative consciousness. Thus, Mulk Raj Anand identifies with
women the means to transcent the confusion, violence, and hypocrisy. His women
are with their talent of sympathetic intuition, their emphasis on value and
Morning Face throws light on the cruel treatment meted out to women.
DevDutt’s wife, Parvati, leads a very miserable life indeed. She is always kept busy
in doing kitchen work and drawing water from the first storey of her house. Utterly
secluded, she lives like a kitchen maid in the storeroom. Devki, the unfortunate
widow of Uncle Pratap, falls into the hands of all kinds of people who try to grab her
money, jewellery and house. She represents the unfortunate Indian widows who
suffer untold agonies and miseries inflicted on them by the greedy members of
male-dominated society. When Krishan’s father, Babu Ram Chand, takes him to
Dr.ChuniLal’s house for treatment of some sensitive boils on his head, the doctor
I really want her to discard all this formality and finish off her
medical course one day. She left it when she was in the second year,
He wishes to make Shakuntala into a model wife. He wants her to be like Gargi, in
Anand’s view of women is expressed in his novel Two Leaves and a Bud.
flowing, one way or the other and restless like the waves, sometimes
sometimes bright and smiling, sometimes soft and sad but always
Her whole life is marked by an eternal flow like restless motion of the waves that
wash away the sorrows and suffering. She always moves to an unknown destination
and refreshes herself with a fast vitality to give tenderness to others. In almost all the
novels of Anand, the life of a woman has been a long tale of sorrows and sufferings.
Most often she is doomed not by the wills of a man, chosen for her by others, but by
the deeds of her own sex. The Old Woman and the Cow presents the whole process
woman who asserts her equal rights with man and demands recognition as such.
The novelist adroitly makes use of the old myth Ramayana and suggests how it is no
longer possible for man either to keep woman suppressed or neglect her lawful
liberty, equality, identity and individuality. The Old Woman and the Cow
eloquently exposes through the portrayal of Gauri what women in India should do
modern world. Promoting women’s rights is not a way to diminish men but is the
174
best warranty of balance and progress for our societies. The traditional attitude of
the society that assigns certain stereotyped roles to women, such as domestic work,
child rearing, taking care of aged parents etc., are factors responsible for the inferior
position of women. Women in India consistently lag behind the men in terms of
access to education, health, jobs, etc. Apart from the economic and social
inequality, women in India are victims of heinous crimes such as, dowry deaths,
rape, molestation and immoral trafficking. In Indian Society, women are placed in a
subordinate position though the preamble of the constitution, the fundamental rights
Throughout the world, women have been deprived of their basic socio-legal
construct, a site on which masculine meanings get spoken and masculine desires
enacted. The factor which changes a girl into a woman with finality is not simply her
anatomy, but the process of social conditioning which influences and moulds her
psyche to desire and pursue traditionally accepted and encouraged feminine roles
human species.
efforts to seek their independence and self-identity started a revolution all over the
world. Women in India have made some progress in the fields of education, health
of evolution. Though in very small numbers today India has women in almost all
175
spheres of life. Women of today are doctors, engineers, pilots, journalists, teachers,
achievements the fact remains that ordinary women’s condition is a grim reality.
The twentieth century generation of writers, more precisely the colonial era
has pictured British dominated society at large, catapulting social themes in Indian
society towards a new direction. Indeed, the very changing face of society in India
comes to the closest to perfect depiction during British India. The face of Indian
woman in all Indian literatures has impressed upon a pan-Indian psyche with
inevitable local touches and variations. Women have inspired literature and the
feminine theme has been a pivotal one. She herself is a creator of literature and is all
pervading. This is true of Indian English literature also. Indian literature spans a rich
variety of themes - from the theme of a conventional woman to that of the new
woman, reflecting in the process the changes that have been going on in the society.
Post-Independence literature portrays all these trends and voices the clamouring of
women for a new and just way of life. Over the years, the age-old image of the
woman seems to be slowly blurring and gradually shading off into oblivion. A new,
bright image is emerging. Anand offers a solution to the predicament of the Indian
woman: education and employment can give her economic independence and can
ensure for her a life of dignity and freedom. C.J. George observes in Mulk Raj
woman. (162)
Conclusion
set up new trends by introducing the antihero in his novels. His fictional world is
peopled by characters from various strata of society; from the lowest to the highest
rungs in the hierarchy. Anand has revealed exceptional psychological insight in the
portrayal of these characters who are real men and women and are not mere
phantoms of fantasy. He attacks social snobbery and social prejudice. For him the
novel is a weapon that should change the life of the masses. He feels that the true
creative ability featuring reality should transform society. People should strive for a
change to better their living conditions. His idea is that idle mind, subservient role
and decadence of the masses is responsible for their own degradation. Anand
transformation in the sleepy Indian society. He does not want the people to be
submissive to unwanted authoritarians. H.C.Harrex points out in The Fire and the
Offering: The English Novel of India 1935-70: “Anand’s characterization within the
His humanitarian view and his desire to uplift the downtrodden from their
degradation, has been his mission in life. He has risen above sectarian or communal
outlook and has consistently written and spoken against capitalists and pleaded for
the causes of the downtrodden. Anand’s objective is humanistic but sometimes his
obvious in his writings. He does not approve of the harrowing conditions in which
the labourers live blaming their fate. He is rational in his approach. He believes that
From the preceding chapters one of the conclusions that may be drawn is that
Anand’s works deserve a special study on human rights because he is the one who
voices out for the voiceless with regard to violation of human rights even before the
Declaration of Human Rights. His concern for the deprived community drives him
to write in order to give expression to the violation of human rights. The present
Social injustice and the violation of human values motivate Anand to voice
out for human rights. He is primarily interested in human values. He uses his art as
a potent tool to bring about a just system for mankind. He always sides with the
underprivileged and depicts their miseries caused by human rights violations. So his
novels and short-stories become a vehicle of his philosophy of human rights. He has
written novels with a view to teaching the people to recognize the fundamental
1800-1970: A Survey, aptly observes that Anand’s novels are “deliberate attempts to
expose the distress of the lower castes and classes of India, they are undisguised in
their plea for social change, and are motivated by intense anger and pity” (36).
The word ‘value’ means ‘worth’. Values are shaped by culture in which we
live. There are values that are held high in most cultures. These include fairness
and justice, compassion and charity, duties and rights. The Indian culture varies like
its vast geography. The people speak different languages, dress differently, follow
different religions, but in spite of all the diversity, India has always been a land of a
Today, people are confused about their values and value system. They face
conflicts and dilemmas. They face dark realities such as corruption, oppression and
particular culture. Therefore, there is a need to value people, ideas, activities and
easier to reach goals that would be impossible to achieve individually; values not
only need to be defined, they must also be maintained, promoted and disseminated.
Values shape people’s relationships, behaviours, choices and sense of who we are.
Human values form the basis of human life. They guide people’s behaviour
and lend meaning to their existence. The world is facing many challenges because
there is no awareness of human values or human rights. Mostly these two aspects are
absent in the lives of the people. Corruption, political and social oppression, unjust
bonded labour, child labour, trafficking, etc. are witnessed everywhere. Indian
linguistic fanaticism and chauvinism. With the help of more and more awareness
programmes and studies of human rights, people will become aware of their
socially or morally. Literature is a tool to reflect the society. Not only does it guide
people but also it inspires them. The function of literature is not only to record
reality but also to illuminate and create new avenues for further social development.
180
Mulk Raj Anand assumes the role of educator and through his fiction, he tries to
reform society by creating awareness among the people of human rights. The
oppressor begins to respect the human rights; the oppressed begin to learn their
When Anand entered the literary scenario the Indian society in the twentieth
century was caste-based. Society followed certain practices which were against the
principles of human rights and natural justice. When the British came to India, they
introduced certain modern ideas of liberty, equality and justice. At the same time,
the British wanted to pacify the orthodox upper section of society too. In the
twentieth century, and especially after 1919, the Indian national movement became
the main propagator of social reform. The novels, dramas, short stories, poetry and
of the violation of human rights of the common people. His novels suggest that a
society committed to human values will not violate the human rights. His novels
highlight the violation of human rights by narrating events. His portrayal of real
characters drawn from across the nation strikes the right note in changing the Indian
society. Anand asserts that his portrayal of underprivileged society would bring
the rich and the poor, the privileged and the underprivileged, and the oppressor and
the oppressed, Anand focuses on the need for implementation of the declaration of
human rights. His commitment to freedom is linked with his commitment to dignity
and equality. Anand’s major scope is to end or minimise the violation of human
181
rights. He pictures the human miseries in order to present his vision of human
values.
India has one of the oldest legal systems in the world. The Indian legal
system of today is a combination of customary laws, Hindu law, Muslim law, British
law and modern jurisprudence. The constitution of India was adopted in 1949, two
equality and dignity of the individual as values fundamental to the constitution that
Rights and Part IV on Directive Principles of state policy contain objectives of the
governance of the nation and for the protection of human rights. The fundamental
rights, mainly civil and political rights are directly enforceable in Indian courts. The
Directive Principles of State policy mainly provide for the protection of economic
thesis is prompted mainly by the treatment of child rights, labour rights, and
principles of human rights as presented in his works. In future research can be done
The dissertation deals with a general view on human rights and how Anand
articulates them in his works. The main focus of the second chapter is examination
care and assistance is recognized not as a favour but rather as a fundamental right of
182
all children. A number of Acts related to human rights issues were passed by the
contain particular references to children. The children Bakha and Munoo give a
warning signal to the society suggesting that the oppressed children should be raised
to the level of human dignity and self-respect. Munoo runs from place to place in
search of justice and dignity. The novel Coolie begins from a child’s innocent
journey as a child labourer and ends as a rickshaw puller. These two novels mirror
the Indian society and make people think about the values and rights of the children.
Coolie is a novel of deep social anger against the plight of the poor in India.
After sixty-six years of independence, it must be admitted with shame that very little
has changed in the lives of the poor in India, and Coolie, written during the British
people.
Coolie and Untouchable are the novels which aim at social reformation.
While the latter deals with the different forms of evils of caste discrimination in
society, the former details the ruthless child labour, exploitation, cruelty and abuse
of poor children that have taken stubborn root in the socio-economic soil of our
land. The novels highlight the loss of precious childhood, and the hardships
humanity that ought to find protection from the adult world. While child labour
laws exist, and the Indian constitution bans the employment of children below the
183
different today. Anand’s Munoo could be any one of millions of India’s children
trapped early in an unending vicious circle of bondage and debt, finding release only
in premature death.
The happy child, curious, wonderstruck, “tracing the colours, the shapes and
sizes of all things, enquiring into their meanings” (C 44) is stung by insults and
slowly settles into the routine of domestic slavery, though not easily: “the wild bird
of his heart fluttered every now and then with the desire for poor happiness” (C 44).
Munoo’s life turns into full circle when he leaves Bombay for Simla. Again, it is for
someone else’s convenience: Mrs.Mainwaring, like Prabha before him, sees in him a
potentially good servant. The description of his illness and death by tuberculosis is
heart-rending.
cobweb of the age-old caste system. Through a gallery of characters Anand weaves
a deep and dense web of actualities and eventualities. His created cosmos in the
novel bears a direct resemblance to the actual one. Untouchable, a creative debut
blazed on the literary horizon in 1935 presents the not comprehensive and logistic
for Gandhi visited his Ashram at Sabarmati and himself cleaned latrines. This
integrated attitude for all labour as a tool of creativity. Anand truly shares the
The study of child rights in these two novels highlights the social evils
attached with children such as child labour, child abuse, neglect, bonded labour,
child discrimination, slavery and so on. Children involved in child labour are
184
usually deprived of access to child rights. Due to the poverty, the vulnerability of
children and their need for income to survive in a poverty- stricken environment,
these children are exploited. The income earned by children in its own way
contributes substantially to their own survival and that of their families. It is either
interferes with the children’s schooling. The UN Convention of the Rights of the
Child (CRC 1989) views child labour as a human right violation. UNICEF declares
that everyone under the age of eighteen is entitled to the rights proclaimed in the UN
conventions on the rights of child including the right to be protected from economic
exploitation.
Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR 1996) obliges state parties to
morals or health” (Article 10). However, the CRC is framed specifically to address
Education has a special and unique role to play in all societies. The school has a
very strong influence in the formative years of a child’s life. Every child is eligible
violation of child rights. A certain section of people are unable to fulfil their basic
needs due to poverty. Children are the creators and shapers of a tomorrow’s nation.
The children of today will be adults of tomorrow. India is standing at the threshold
185
of a new era of progress. The children should get proper education and good values
The third chapter highlights the treatment of labour rights in Two Leaves and
a Bud and The Big Heart. The novel Two leaves and a Bud brings to light the
inhuman cruelty perpetrated by the whites. Anand was so outraged at this inhuman
treatment that he painted the exploiters in the darkest hue and in consequence, the
British Government banned this book. The novel documents the oppressed coolies
on the tea estates. A fierce denunciation of man’s cruelty to man, Two leaves and a
Bud projects Anand’s humanism, his rejection of theories of Karma and God, and
the destructive effects of poverty. The coolies are overworked and underpaid. Their
living condition is inhuman. The privileged classes violated the human rights of the
poor.
depict the pathetic plight of the poor and the underdogs. He rejects the fate and
points out that all these are manmade and the result of the weakness of the masses.
This novel is a more powerful diatribe against establishment than Untouchable and
Coolie. It exposes the ways by which the British exploited the ignorant labourers.
The train to Assam serves as trap to transport the innocent coolies. The poor though
virtuous are unable to outdo the social oppression and suppression. Their life is a
tale of continuous suffering and struggle with no end in sight. His uniqueness lies in
his full pledged concentration on the under privileged Anand is the counterpart of
Charles Dickens who is the first English writer to expose the exploitation of the poor
The Big Heart (1945) has been acclaimed as a great novel by Margaret Beny,
get work. They are thrown out of their hereditary profession and are rendered
jobless. Starvation is in store for them. The machine deprives them of their daily
bread. Ananta, the coppersmith, the man with the big heart like Ratan in Coolie,
steps in. Though Ananta faces inhuman treatment due to the introduction of
machines, he does not become blind to facts. He recognizes the reined horse power
Anand, at this period, took the plunge to pick his heroes from the soil and
dirt from the lowest stratum of life. He decided to paint India in stark reality and not
predecessors had done. Real India, he felt, could be found amidst untouchables,
coolies, landless labourers, exploited women, and ousted princes. He discloses these
victims of society by portraying them as protagonists of his novels make them work
introduction of what Anand himself calls his principal characters ‘negative heroes’
in his novels.
Anand realises that the social context of the Indian novelists is different from
that we are not the middle classes of Europe and America. We must
one man rule, we are dimly becoming aware of the nature of our
God Vishnu, who will not wake up to help us, because the Kaliyug is
not yet over. (M. R. Anand, A Note on Henry James and the Art of
Anand felt that one could depend more on art and literature for solace than
on religion and philosophy. According to him, “Literature, music and art are better
worth worshipping than God or a Deity for whom the sanction lies in the intuitions
women and eager to see them emerge from the violation of their rights. Anand
treated women with respect in his own life. He strongly condemns the society
which sticks to myths and age-old customs. His women characters are traditional.
Gauri and Sohini are the voices of many Indian women who struggle against the
Anand feels that woman whether she is rich or poor is marginalized. Women
in his novels are victims of male aggression, and they suffer passively. Her destiny
is determined by man. Women in his novels are subalterns who rarely speak or and
In The Old Woman and the Cow, Gauri rejects the narrow world of
orthodoxy. Gauri is an epitome of a life of suffering for a long period. If she resists,
she is subjugated. The male society will accept her only in the form of a victim. She
is the true case of gendered subaltern. The novel brings forth different phases in the
rules over her like a monster over a slave. If Gauri is helpless and silently
submissive at the beginning of the novel and like a subaltern who rarely speaks, in
188
the end she emerges victorious. Indian society has defined a particular code of
conduct to persons belonging to every caste. Similarly, women in every caste are
lower than men in their community. The women belonging to the downtrodden are
in a deplorable state. The Manu dharma Shastra denies equal status for women
along with men. Girls are denied education. Women cannot utter the veda Mantras.
The upper caste men can sexually exploit any woman, even a woman of the low
have taken place with respect to social life of the Indian women. The changes are
slow in pace in comparison with the developed countries. But the condition of
women in India is also improving. The reform movements in the nineteenth and
education and gradually became conscious of their rights, privileges and status. Now
several other affairs, women have made mark on society. With various reform
movements and gradual change in the perception of women in society, there has
age.
instruments committing to secure equal rights of women. The National Policy for
the Empowerment of Women, 2001 was framed by the Government of India with
In January 1992, the National Commission for Women (NCW) was set up as a
statutory body under the National Commission for Women Act, 1990 to review
189
measures, facilitate redress of grievances and advice the Government on all policy
civil liberties for individual citizens, including freedom of religion, the abolition of
According to Anand, the novel can awaken the consciousness of the readers.
A novelist moves the readers through the novel’s cathartic effect. Anand’s concept
ardent love for human beings and his pity for the suffering, and the downtrodden
that leads him to believe that the function of literature is to enable man recognise his
dignity. Anand rises in value because of his love for the enslaved. As a fiction writer
Anand has been noticed for vitality and sense of actuality. Anand selects the lower
section of the society--those with purity and innocence and gives full life and blood
to them. Anand understood the degree of pain and suffering of his fellowmen. He is
the champion of the suppressed. He has always written to steer man’s worthiness for
respect and to generate pity and love for the underdogs and the down trodden. He
writes for the sake of man for cleaning and making him noble and for leading him
into action calculated to achieve the welfare for all. A plethora of literary activities
penned by him show that his main purpose is to divulge that fact; questionable
representation given to the subaltern and the different social problems of Indian
society. His provocative remarks call for a new India, free from any kind of
190
discrimination and exploitation. Not interfering with the rights of the others is a
Anand, Mulk Raj. “A Note on Henry James and the Art of Fiction in India.”
—. The Big Heart. New Delhi: Arnold Heinemann Publishers, 1980. Print.
—. The Old Woman and the Cow. Bombay : Kuthub - Popular, 1960. Print.
Arora, Neena. The Novels of Mulk Raj Anand: A Study of his Hero. Delhi: Atlantic
Badal, R.K. Indo-Anglican Literature. Bareilly : Prakash Book Depot, 1975. Print.
Berry, Margaret. The Man and the Novelist. Amsterdam : Oriental Press, 1971.
Print.
Cousins, James H. The Renaissance in India. Madras: Orient Longman, 1918. Print.
193
Cowasjee, Saroj, ed. Mulk Raj Anand: Author to Critic: Letters of Mulk Raj Anand
—. So Many Freedom: A Study of the Major Fiction of Mulk Raj Anand. Madras:
Dasan, A. S. The Rains and the Roots: The Indian English Novel Then and Now.
Dhawan, R. K. Indian Women Writers. New Delhi: Prestige Books, 2001. Print.
Geogre, C. J. Mulk Raj Anand: His Art and Concerns. New Delhi: Atlantic
Harrex. The Fire and the Offering: The English Language Novel of India 1935-70.
Henderson, Philip. The Novel Today. London: The Bodley Head, 1936. Print.
194
Print.
Krishna Nandan sinha, ed. “Mulk Raj Anand, “Why I write”, Indian Writing in
Kumari, R. Brides are not for Burning: Dowry Victims in India. New Delhi:
Lindsay, Jack. The Elephant and the Lotus: A Study of the Novels of Mulk Raj
2014. Web.
1968. Print.
Merson, Rupert. Rules are not Enough: The Art of Governance in the Real World.
Mohan, T. M. J. Indra. The Novels of Mulk Raj Anand. New Delhi: Atlantic
Mukherjee, Meenakshi. Realism and Reality . New Delhi : OUP , 1985. Print.
Naik, M. K. Mulk Raj Anand. New Delhi: Arnold Heinamann, 1973. Print.
—. The Ironic Vision: A Study of the Fiction of R. K. Narayan. New York: Sterling
P, 1983. Print.
2012. Web.
195
Paul, Premila. The Novels of Mulk Raj Anand: A Thematic Study. New Delhi:
—. The Tyranny of Class System: The Novels of Mulk Raj Anand - A Thematic
Rajan, P. K. A Dialogue with Mulk Raj Anand: Studies in Mulk Raj Anand. Delhi:
Print.
Walsh, William. Indian Literature in English. New York: Longman, 1990. Print.