Fasting, Feasting by Antia Desai, Houghton Mifflin Company
Fasting, Feasting by Antia Desai, Houghton Mifflin Company
Fasting, Feasting by Antia Desai, Houghton Mifflin Company
CONCLUSION
The story is told in two parts, from two central characters. The first
part takes place in India, and focuses on Uma, the eldest sister of an aspiring
middle-class family. Uma is a bit slow-witted and physically clumsy, but she has
dreams for her life. However, at every turn, her parents thwart her aspirations and
turn her into a servant in the household. Her prospects for marriage crumble, and
she is denied even the simplest pleasures. She is not alone. Nearly all the women in
the story are bound in service to men, their own dreams unsupported and
unsustained.
The second part takes place in United States, and focuses on Arun,
the youngest child and only boy in the family. The family (especially Uma)
scarifies everything so that Arun can succeed, achieve and prosper. While it seems
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that he has everything, he long desperately for affection. During his time in the
United States, the land of plenty, he sees the elements of physical and emotional
deprivation in American family life, even as he himself goes hungry rather than eat
meat with the host family.
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role that society accords to women except in marriage is what is poignantly
articulated in the personal stories of Uma and Anamika.
The primary region of the book is set in India, and set up around
Uma, a plain, irritated at young lady. Her life seems, by all accounts, to be truly
discouraging without the option of a life partner for whom she can improves his
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reputation. Over and over, we see Uma being dismissed and bearing the
desolations of being an Indian woman who is not picked as a wife of a man, but
rather then, Desai moreover sets this disrespect amidst the lives of different women
have been offered and are certainly not happy. In one case, what was seen as an
immaculate marriage is later to be seen as a devastatingly shocking one.
Fragment two is much shorter, yet based on the family’s star, Arun,
who is in the United States taking off to school. One gets the inclination that this
youthful individual is terribly harried, and depressed with his life, paying little
personality to where he’s found. Not the scarcest piece do you see him in control
of his own life, yet like his sister, is all that much being controlled by the wishes
and longings of his family, people and society.
Desai’s novel demonstrates to us that all social orders can and put weights
on us to finish or be things that we could possibly wish for. In a bona fide sense,
the reality opportunities ached for, yet not seen.
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family? Everyone wanted to hear” (p.16). The inequality of value gender is
disgusting demonstrated as it wasn’t Anamika’s beating or miscarriage which
people where concerned with people where concerned with but rather with her
inability to produce sons.
This book is about the children and families of middle class who is living
and surviving in Bombay. I have truly delighted in perusing this novel. It is
composed well, streams easily however not tastelessly, and is compellingly
fascinating. The characters in it are all around depicted and to a great degree
authentic.
Things being what are, the book’s title gets to be curious- fasting and
feasting, Where are profound void and renewal to be found?. It strikes you as
deceiving when the first half is over and you find the second half is another
fundamental hero. Still, by and large, I must say- awesome read.
Short-listed for the 1999 Booker Prize, Desai’s stunning new novel (after
journey to Ithaca) looks gently but without sentimentality at an Indian family that,
despite Western influence, is bound by Eastern traditions. As Desai’s title implies,
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the novel is divided into two parts. At the heart of Part one, set in India, is Uma,
the overprotected daughter who finds herself starved for a life. Plain, myopic and
perhaps dim, Uma gives up school and marriage, finding herself in her 40s looking
after her demanding if well- meaning parents. Uma’s younger, prettier sister
marries quickly to escape the same fate, but seems dissatisfied. Although the
family is “quite capable of putting on a progressive, westernized front,” it’s clear
that privileges are still reserved for boys. When her brother, Arun, is born, Uma is
expected to abandon her education at the convent school to take care of him. It is
Arun, the ostensibly privileged son, smothered by his father’s expectations, who is
focus of the second part of the novel. The summer after his freshmen year at the
University of Massachusetts, Arun stays with the Pattrons, as only –too –
recognizable American family. While Deasi paints a nuanced and delicate portrait
of Uma’s family, here the writer broadens her brush strokes, starkly contrasting the
Pattons’ surfeit of food and material comforts with the domestic routine of Indian
household. Indeed, Desai is so adept at portraying Americans through Indian eyes
that the Pattons remain as inscrutable to the reader as they are to Arun. But Arun
himself, as he picks his way through a mine field of puzzling American customs,
becomes a more sympathetic character, and his final act in the novel suggests both
how far he has come and how much he has lost. Although Desai takes a risk in
shifting from the endearing Uma to Arun, she has much to say in this graceful,
supple novel about the inability of the families in either culture to nurture their
children.
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Anita Desai has been celebrated by some for her ear for dialogue, but she
gets it all wrong here. Her presentation of life in the United States is especially
obvious. Her characters, living in Massachusetts, talk like they are in Texas. The
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As for her chapters set in India, Desai allows ideology to drive her
narrative, with predictable results. It they way she incorporates dowry death into
her story and less of a cliché in India then the way she utilizes the bulimic girl in
order to describe American excess? Unfortunately, American readers of
Anglophone Indian fiction are so often overwhelmed by the exoticism of these
stories that they fail to separate the wheat from the chaff.
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The central character of the novel is novel doubts Uma…the eldest one …
she is clumsy and has no major achievements to her credit expect that she took care
of his small brother and failed her school exams regularly… the black sheep of
the family on which nobody has any hopes… but the character does evoke
sympathy … the life which leads has not been chosen by her but gifted to her
family… her only fault is she obliged them.
Aruna is happy character in the plot. She is someone who knows how to get
things done and is successful in everything she does. That’s what her parents
thinks about her and is proud of the fact that too with a person who is rich and non
fussy. Again a stark reality in our society wherein the only achievement of a
women sometimes is carrying off a marriage.
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Between Uma and Arun, between Mama Papa’s family and the Patton’s,
between Mira-Masi’s sparse meals and the Patton’ fridge full of food, Desai
cleverly integrates the title of the book.
Also brought to mind for me the part of the first line of Anna Karenina:
‘every unhappy family is unhappy in its own way’. This was the first book by
Anita Desai that I read. Enjoyed the wonderful play of words and the way
everyday characters and happenings are brought to life here but they book left me
oddly dissatisfied too, waiting for some sort of closure for the main characters at
least.
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