Two novels of Puspa
Rai
“Farak Baato”
or “Different Road” is the title of
the critical book written by Dr. Remika Thapa. As the title
suggests Remika highlights the alternative
point of view proposed by Ms Puspa Rai in her two fictional works namely
“Bholiko Pratikshya” or “Waiting for Tomorrow” and “Madhyantar” or “Interval”.
Dr. Remika maintains that Bholiko Pratikshya is the first feminist novel in
Indian Nepali Language and consequently Puspa Rai has become the first feminist
novelist in Indian Nepali writings.
The two novels can be called duology as the second
novel follows the theme of earlier one. The main characters of the fictions are
women in both the novels. The first
novel “Bholiko Pratikshya” is about women’s
independence in choice of her existence and her life. It is about the
motherhood outside the traditional family norms. This narrative puts a question
mark on famiily values and conjugal lives from women’s perspective.
The main protagonist is named as Shanti and she is an
adopted daughter of a childless Thapa couple. She is loved and cared by her
father but disliked by her mother. Smt Thapa is infertile and this causes her
to develop complex of insecurity. She becomes jealous of her adopted daughter,
to whom she never considers as her daughter.
She tries hard to create a distance between her daughter and her
husband. But Mr. Thapa loves his daughter as his own offspring and desires to
provide everything possible for her to make her life successful and better. He
sends her to school as he knows this is only the way she would be successful
later in her life. He is shown as pious and not gender biased. For him an
adopted daughter deserves the same treatment as his natural daughter.
But it is not so with Mrs. Thapa even though she is a
woman. She is a traditional woman with patriarchal mindset. As Shanti is not a
daughter born of her womb she does not find any connection with her. For her
she is not only a stranger in her house but an undesirable being disturbing
peace. She does not love her. She does not miss any opportunity to humiliate her.
Shanti bears every shenanigans of her mother calmly and she brushes it of her
mind as though it was nothing serious or as normal thing. She does not consider
it of any significance so far as her father loves her.
Shanti completes her education successfully and after that She goes to Kathmandu for her higher education and achieves getting into the post of professorship in a college.
When she grows up as a young woman as is normal with any women of her age love and sexuality blooms within her. She gets into relationship with men for love. For her love
is sublime, it is supreme surrender and sacrifice for ultimate union of two
souls. But very soon she realizes the bitter truth that men never love and the
pretence of love by them are for their selfish carnal pleasure only. She finds
the world as loveless and treacherous. But without love the whole edifice of conjugal life and
family gets crumbled. She believes motherhood is the essence of women. The gift
of nature and the power of her body which ensures her happiness and continuity
of her life must be secured. This is her essence and her very existence depends
on this realization. She resolves to remain unmarried but she will give birth
to a child. Though this would be against the norm of society but this is the only
way she can reclaim herself, protect her feminity and her essence of being.
Madhyantar (Interval) can be described
as a sequel to “Bholiko Praikshya” as the theme of this novel supplements. This
novel is also a feminist one but it goes deeper into the meanings of human
lives. The title itself is imbued with layers of meanings. Madhyantar is
interval but it is also an intervention to a flow of story or life. A man’s
life is but an interval in history of mankind.
The novel is about the life of Purnisha.
She comes from a low income background as her father is only a low grade
employee. But she is beautiful, intelligent and good in her studies. She is
social and is ready to extend her services wherever required. Purnisha helps her friend’s brother to
recover from drug addiction. She pretends her love to him to make him
understand how important it is for him to be free from such abuses. Later she
falls in love with another brother of her friend and marries him. She lives a
blissful married life for some years. She was very happy. As her husband was
rich she could also feel secure about her life. But as years passes by she
comes to know that her husband was different from what she thought of him. As a
woman she loved her husband with her whole being and complete surrender. She
trusted him from the deepest core of heart. She comes to know that her husband
was a womanizer and abusive. He has no respect and love for her. Upon realization of her unredeemable situation with him she makes her mind to leave him despite the advance stage of her pregnancy. She finds marriage only as an
interval in her life. In a patriarchal society marriage is a also form of oppression
for women.
Ms Puspa Rai opines wherever
repression occurs an appropriate recinprocal response will be there from the
oppressed side. Men have been oppressive to all women through the ages and
women have been raising their voices against the repression. This raising of
voices against men is collectively called feminism. Ever since the realization
by women of their oppression they have been raising their concerns as per what
they perceived of most important issue of the period. This is now described as
waves by theorries of feminism. So far three prominent waves have been
recognized of these movements. They are named as first second and third waves.
The period covering from May Wolstencroft of eighteenth
to first half
of twentieth century marked by towering presence of Simone de Bouvoir is called
first wave. From 1960 onwards a new wave of women made their forceful presence.
Prominent among them are writers like Helene Cixous, Julia Kristeva, Luce
Irrigaray, Kate Millet, Showalter etc. The difference between the first and
second is on issues of feminism. First wave basically concentrated on
education, wage employment, voting right and equality with men in all respects.
The first wave was against treating women as a different specimen of human
being. It was anti essential and did not
want typefying women with specific character. They believed that men and women are
not different and separate parameters should not be applied while understanding
women. Virginia Woolf maintained that women are as intelligent as men. They appear
lesser only because their intelligence are not recognized by men. The second
wave feminism which is first noticed in France lays emphasis on womanhood and
the difference. Helene Cixous was influenced by Jacque Derrida and uses his findings
in defining women. She maintains that women are different from men and to show
this difference a new knowledge system should be developed. She says the
language we use are patriarchal and biased towards men’s ideology so a new
language should replace with which is in consonant with feminine
characteristics. This she calls feminine ecriture or writing.
Ms Rai in her interview appended in
this book says that women are different from men and they should be defined as
such. She is therefore appears to be of second wave generation. As per her age
she is contemporary of second wave. It is amazing to find that a woman writer relatively less advanced place like India
and Darjeeling to be specific who could conceptualise womanhood in the same spirit and intellectual brilliance as that of from highly developed and advanced place like Paris France or United
States of America.
Third wave feminism is associated
with that group of women writers who were born after 1970s and are pursuing
feminism as the main objective. Baumgarten is the principal among third wave
feminist writers and they have published manifesto also which highlights their
issues. But it was Julia Kristeva who had predicted the arrival of third wave
in her essay on third wave feminism in 1980s.
The main objection to first and
second wave feminist was that they did not address on concerns of coloured
women and the problems of third world women which are different from white
women. Third Wave has tried to take along as many voices of concerns as are
seen and heard across the world. Motherhood, single motherhood is one of the
issues incorporated by it. “Bholiko Pratikshya” advocates for single motherhood
as the protagonist Shanti finds men coward and not at all reliable. She
resolves to give birth to child outside wedlock. This makes Puspa Rai crossing
over second wave to third wave as development of her idea of feminine
existence.
As for the literariness of the two
novels narratives have been drawn from the lives of people of Darjeeling urban
area. Most of the characters are well educated and are financially secure. The
theme revolves around love, sexuality and existential anxiety. The dichotomy
and the disharmony between male and female are well pronounced. Just as all
male are not malicious female characters too are shown of having dominating
nature and malevolent tendency. Sexism is not about having being a woman only
but one has to appear as such. This is implicit in the narrative and
characterization.
Syntax and figuration are complex
but quite poetical. The text is rhythmic and the structure of sentences long
and with ample surprises. This builds up curiosity in the reader even though
narration is not dramatic. There are very few developments and interactions as
both these fictions have very few characters to built on winding narrative.
These novels were written with
specific idea for raising the issues of feminism in Nepali community. She has
not shown all men as oppressive and harmful to women but nevertheless women do
suffer from men folk. These novels cannot be identified with tragedy
comedy terms. The protagonists suffer but they find their way through these
trials of travesty. What they aim and achieve cannot be called triumph in the
normal sense but for these women this was the liberation and ultimate
achievement of what they thought best for them. The preservation of being of
womanhood is more important than patriarchal mode of societal values. This is
not actually representing reality or adopting mirror theory of literature. Rai
wanted to show this is what a woman should aspire to do to make her life
happier. This is the roadmap for woman and the overall society to look forward
to.
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