The Un-Changing India In The White Tiger By Aravind Adiga

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various sections of society in India. It is a story of Balram, a young boy’s voyage from Darkness to Light, from rags to riches, transforming from a village teashop boy into a Bangalore entrepreneur. The paper argues class divide and disempowerment in India which is making poor poorer and rich richer. The paper investigates not only how Balram underwent the pathetic and rigorous life as an underclass boy but also the way he escalated to a position of business tycoon in Bangalore city. Against this backdrop, the paper analyses the protagonist’s ability to overcome the hardships and harsh realities of life, keeping his dreams alive and achieving global echelon. Keywords: Aravind Adiga; Class Division; Disempowerment; Global; Suppression The (Un)Changing India in Aravind Adiga’s The White Tiger …show more content…

Although the concept was widely practiced in the past yet even today it is followed and has taken a vicious form which segregates people from one another and creates void among people. This has led to suppression and exploitation of various sections of society, including women. At one hand when India is achieving global echelon by claiming for permanent seat in UN Security Council, it is also surrounded by multitude of problems which Aravind Adiga has rightly been able to address in his novel The White Tiger. He has raised the issues of social problems of utter poverty, moral corruption, rising intolerance, child labour, communal hatred, escalating unemployment, tax evading rackets, embittered master servant relationship, weakening family structure and economic and social disparities prevalent in Indian society. The novel also reflects the brighter picture of shining India, social mobility and progressing India. However, so far economic growth has irrationally benefitted only the

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