Monday, March 20, 2017

The Namesake by Jhumpa Lahiri

Jhumpa Lahiri's 'The Namesake' is the story of a young American Indian , Gogol.Gogol hates the name given to him by his parents , his 'good name' as they call it. He particularly hates the comparison to his namesake , Nikolai Gogol and is embarrassed by it . Gogol grows to be a handsome young architect , falls in love with an American girl and is happy for a while living with her and her family.Later,Gogol meets an Indian girl and marries her but feels lonely in the relationship. 
Gogol is not proud of his origins , in fact he has been shown to hate them .He is shown growing more sensitive to his family , particularly his mother as time passes . His reactions to his father's death are especially touching . Jhuma Lahiri has managed to portray beautifully how Gogol's mother Ashima adjusts to her life in a foreign country , how she evolves from being a homesick housewife to a confident woman comfortable in her surroundings.. 

Kim : by Rudyard Kipling

Rudyard Kipling was one of the most popular writers of his era, and his novel Kim, first published in 1901, has become one of his most well-known non-juvenile works.
The novel takes place at a time contemporary to the book's publication; its setting is India under the British Empire. The title character is a boy of Irish descent who is orphaned and grows up independently in the streets of India, taken care of by a "half-caste" woman, a keeper of an opium den. Kim, an energetic and playful character, although full-blooded Irish, grows up as a "native" and acquires the ability to seamlessly blend into the many ethnic and religious groups of the Indian subcontinent. When he meets a wandering Tibetan lama who is in search of a sacred river, Kim becomes his follower and proceeds on a journey covering the whole of India. Kipling's account of Kim's travels throughout the subcontinent gave him opportunity to describe the many peoples and cultures that made up India, and a significant portion of the novel is devoted to such descriptions, which have been both lauded as magical and visionary and derided as stereotypical and imperialistic.
Kim eventually comes upon the army regiment that his father had belonged to and makes the acquaintance of the colonel. Colonel Creighton recognizes Kim's great talent for blending into the many diverse cultures of India and trains him to become a spy and a mapmaker for the British army. The adventures that Kim undergoes as a spy, his endearing relationship with the lama, and the skill and craftsmanship of Kipling's writing have all caused this adventurous and descriptive—if controversial—novel to persist as a minor classic of historical English literature.

Heathan : By Jack London

Jack London , the writer of this short story is an American author , juronalist and social activity. He has contributed many well known works to society
The narrative pattern of this story is very complicated .The narrator named Charley has directly dedicated this story to his  friend Otto who is negro man . The story presents voyages of these two characters .They have been living together for seventeen years. Their relationship is based on their emotion rather then master or slave.
The very meaning of heathen is the person who does not belong to any fix or particular class or community.the story reveals that Otto is considered to be the heathen as he does not belong to upperclassmen though he is from the African American class. The African people are suppressed by the whites and they are dragged to their own class but they are considered to be slave. This story also demonstrate the idea of master slave relationship.the white belives that the black are born to be merely slaves and that is why they are forced to be African Christian in which otooo remains d ifferent from them and thus he becomes the heathen of that community.
Jack has indirectly given his views over how society creates injustice to the people. If Otto does not belong to his Christian community then society also does not belong to the religion names Humanity and it does not let human beings live their life the way they want to.

Moby Dick : By Herman Melville

Herman Melvills early adventure novels—Typee (1846), Omoo (1847),Redburn (1849), and White Jacket(1850)—brought Herman Melville a notable amount of popularity and financial success during his lifetime, it was not until the 1920’s and 1930’s, nearly fifty years after his death, that he received universal critical recognition as one of the greatest nineteenth century American authors. Melville took part in the first great period of American literature—the period that included Edgar Allan Poe, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Walt Whitman, and Henry David Thoreau. For complexity, originality, psychological penetration, breadth, and symbolic richness, Melville achieved his greatest artistic expression with the book he wrote when he was thirty years old, Moby Dick.
Between the time of his birth in New York City and his return there to research and write his masterpiece, Melville had circled the globe of experience—working as a bank messenger, salesman, farmhand, schoolteacher (like his narrator, Ishmael), engineer and surveyor, bowling alley attendant, cabin boy, and whaleman in the Pacific on the Acushnet. His involvement in the mutinous Pacific voyage, combined with accounts of a notorious whale called Mocha Dick that wrought havoc in the 1840’s and 1850’s, certainly influenced the creation of Moby Dick.
The tangled themes of this mighty novel express the artistic genius of a mind that, according to Hawthorne, “could neither believe nor be comfortable in unbelief.” Many of those themes are characteristic of American Romanticism: the “isolated self” and the pain of self-discovery, the insufficiency of conventional practical knowledge in the face of the “power of blackness,” the demoniac center to the world, the confrontation of evil and innocence, the fundamental imperfection of humans, Faustian heroism, the search for the ultimate truth, the inadequacy of human perception.Moby Dick is, moreover, a unique literary form, combining elements of the psychological and picaresque novel, sea story and allegory, the epic of “literal and metaphorical quest,” the satire of social and religious events, the emotional intensity of the lyric genre (in diction and in metaphor), Cervantian romance, Dantesque mysticism, Rabelaisian humor, Shakespearean drama (both tragedy and comedy), journalistic travel book, and scientific treatise on cetology. Melville was inspired by Hawthorne’s example to give his story the unifying quality of a moral parable, although his own particular genius refused to allow that parable an unequivocal, single rendering.
In style and theme, Melville also was influenced by Edmund Spenser, William Shakespeare, Dante, Miguel de Cervantes, Robert Burton, Sir Thomas Carlyle, Thomas Browne, and vastly miscellaneous reading in the New York Public Library (as witnessed by the two “Etymologies” and the marvelous “Extracts” that precede the text itself, items from the writer’s notes and files that he could not bear to discard). It was because they did not know how to respond to its complexities of form and style that the book was “broiled in hell fire” by contemporary readers and critics. Even today, the rich mixture of its verbal texture—an almost euphuistic flamboyance balanced by dry, analytical expository prose—requires a correspondingly unique sensitivity on the part of the reader. The most remarkable thing about the plot is that Moby Dick does not appear physically until after five hundred pages and is not even mentioned by name until nearly two hundred pages into the novel.
Whether it be the knowledge of reality, an embodiment of the primitive forces of nature, the deep subconscious energies of humanity, fate or destiny inevitably victorious over illusory free will, or simply the unknown in experience, it is what Moby Dick stands for that occupies the narrator’s emphasis and the reader’s attention through the greater part of the novel. In many ways, the great white whale may be compared to Spenser’s “blatant beast” who, in The Faerie Queene(1590-1596), also represents the indeterminable elusive quarry and also escapes at the end to continue haunting the world.
Moby Dick is often considered to be the American epic. The novel is replete with the elements characteristic of that genre: the piling up of classical, biblical, historical allusions to provide innumerable parallels and tangents that have the effect of universalizing the scope of action; the narrator’s strong sense of the fatefulness of the events he recounts and his corresponding awareness of his own singular importance as the narrator of momentous—otherwise unrecorded—events; Queequeg as Ishmael’s “heroic companion,” the folk flavor provided by countless proverbial statements; the leisurely pace of the narrative with its frequent digressions and parentheses; the epic confrontation of life and death on a suitably grand stage (the sea) with its consequences for the human city (the Pequod); the employment of microcosms to explicate the whole (for example, the painting in the Spouter Inn, the Nantucket pulpit, the crow’s nest); epithetical characterization; a cyclic notion of time and events; an epic race of heroes (the Nantucket whalers with their biblical and exotic names); the mystical power of objects (Ahab’s chair, the gold coin, or the Pequoditself); the alienated, sulking hero (Ahab); and the use of lists to enhance the impression of an all-inclusive compass. Finally, Moby Dick shares the usually didactic purpose of a folk epic; on one level, its purpose is to teach the reader about whales; on another level, it is to inspire the reader to become an epic hero.
All this richness of purpose and presentation is somehow made enticing by Melville’s masterly invention of his narrator. Ishmael immediately establishes a comfortable rapport with the reader in the unforgettable opening lines of the novel. He is both the objective observer and a participant in the events observed and recounted, both spectator and narrator. Yet he is much more than the conventional wanderer/witness. As a schoolmaster and sometime voyager, he combines his intellectual knowledge with firsthand experience to make him an informed observer and a convincing, moving reporter. Simply by surviving, he transcends the Byronic heroism of Ahab, as the wholesome overcoming the sinister.

How much land does a man need : by Leo Tolstoy


How much land does a Man actually require?
Human nature pushes us to want more and more. In the story, “How much Land does a Man require?” Pakhom, the protagonist, portrays the nature of Greed in Humans. A simple peasant living in the Countryside in his Lust for Power, status in Society, wealth seeks to own more and more Land and eventually finds himself losing everything including his Life. 
The usage of “Land” in the Story makes a direct Metaphor for the Greed of more wealth and Stature. Even today, the issue of Land is very Important just as it was during the early Capitalism Epoch where the Story takes place.
Pakhom went through many transactions for various Lands at different Prices; As Socrates said, “He who is not contented with what he has, would not be contented with what he would like to have.” This is applies well to Pakhom. We are never content with our Lives, no matter how off we may be and while trying to out stand the standard of Living, and we put ourselves in the eyes of danger, ending up with nothing! 
Pakhom brags that even the Devil cannot stop him if he has Land, thus the devil secretly challenges him. Pakhom’s path for an apparent “Glory” begins with The Barina, 15 Dessiatins does the Job well, but he was harassed by the neighboring Peasants and moved to the Lands beyond the Volga and he was allotted 50 Dessiatins. Pakhom lived happily for 5 years before he grew frustrated and began to cast for an estate outright. He closed a deal with a Peasant who was willing to sell 500 Dessiatins for 1000 Rubles When Pakhom hears about the Land of The Bashkirs, he is delighted and wishes to own some of their Land, when he is further told that the Price is only 1000 Rubles for the Area of Land that he can in a Day, he is Overwhelmed and Excited, he sees a Future of Possibilities and hopes to cover at least 5o Versts.
Pakhom completes the challenge and gains much Land indeed but it is Short Lived as the Strain has drained the Life out of him.

The postmaster: by Rabindranath tagore

Rabindranath Tagore is 20th century a versatile and prolific writer .his work is originally written in Bengali and later on translated into other languages.here the postmaster a full of pathos and heart wrenching . Story moves the readers to tears. So many emotions have conveyed by Tagore in such a subtle meaner and story revolves mainly around four themes
1) longing
2) separation
3) companionship
4)dependency
The postmaster is moving story of the love of a simple , rustic girl for a city bred man.the man from culcatta is posted as a postmaster in a remote village. In his attempts to escape from a terrifying loneliness .He shows love and affection on his maid servant ratan.he listens to the story of her childhood,about her parents and family members. Ratan in all her simplicity, grows immensely attached to Dada the postmaster,a person can not hold the that place for a long time and he decides to resign and go back to Calcutta . At the end of story the decision leaves the  orphan girl dump founded.here Tagore depicts the futility of this girl's love and pathetic situation,she finds herself in with great intensity.
While the story takes place within a colonial context.its main function is not as an for colonialism. The interaction of the characters dadababu and ratan exhibits the misunderstanding that often arroused between native indians results of different views on the different tradition and we find the different emotion which Dadababu and ratan have for each other that present the central point of the story.

All My Sons : by Arthur Miller

The Keller House is one with white picket fencing, an immaculately kept house, with smiles, laughter and kisses. With a broken tree at the forefront of the garden, it gives a glimpse into what is happening under the surface of this family. Arthur Miller’s All My Sons is a critically acclaimed tale of love, families and lies searching for normality and calm after the war.
The Don of the family, Joe Keller is a seemingly laid back, jovial sort with an affliction of his son Larry who is missing at war, his son Chris and an unsettled wife. Reeling in the aftermath of loosing their son and the deployment of faulty engine parts for warplanes, the family soon begin to unravel under the immense pressure. The Keller’s are seemingly centre focus of the neighbourhood, with kids and friends popping on by. Larry’s sweetheart, the girl next door, Lydia comes to stay under Chris’s invitation and the Keller’s world start to unravel.
The set design by Michael Taylor of the Keller’s house was vast and all encompassing on the stage at The Rose. A full scale family house was impeccably constructed with every timber in line and every swing of the front door. Remnants of a storm left scattered leaves on the lawn, with Larry’s tree knocked to the ground. The costume team led by Tracy Stiles perfectly captured 1940’s America, the demure and liberating dresses and trousers for women represented an America free from the constraints of war.
The actors were fluid and engaging, slowly revealing the death of their characters and the pain that they held from the war. The dynamic relationship between Lydia (Grace Carter) and Chris (Alex Waldmann) was refreshing and troubled, which was conveyed convincingly and solidly. Penny Downie as Kate Keller was heart wrenching and intense as we watched her troubled mind cling on for survival. The dark and curious Joe Keller, played by David Horovitch ignited some reminiscence of the Godfather. Overall the cast were tight, fluid and comfortable with the production. The staging at times was questionable as several times the audience are faced with the actors’ backs at high intensity moments, such as when Kate is questioning Lydia’s life in New York. I think that the audience would benefit more in being able to see Lyida’s face to truly begin to understand and invest in her character from the beginning as that is a vital moment in the story.
Overall as a production All My Sons was a stellar production, raising moral questions and wonders into what risks people are willing to take for themselves and their families.