The relationship with of between a women and her husband tends to hold a great amount of significance to the way they interact with each other and express their desires. However, literature tends to favor the male perspective or even minimize the relationship between a husband and wife. Within South Asian literature, it is hard to see a realistic representative of women desires in a husband wife relationship but short stories such as Wings by Ambai and Band Ghari by Gaura Pant, allows one to see how each wife interacts with her husband and how their desires manifest from given interactions. Ambai’s Wings is about Chaya’s relationship with her penny pinching husband Bkaskaran, who expresses no emotions towards his wife and son. On the other hand, Pant’s Band Ghari explores the relationship between Maya and her tyrant husband Girish. Both women grow unhappy with their marriage in which similarity can be seen through their suffering; however their reaction to their suffering varies.
Firstly, there is the clear evidence that both women feel as if they are unhappy in their marriage. This unhappiness is important to both characters as it leads them to find a way to escape their suffering and be free in their own sense. For Chaya, there is a desire to spread her “wing” but to do so she thought of the one thing that forbidden to Hindu women; Chaya planned on leaving her husband and creating new life for herself (Ambai 48). Maya plan to escape from her suffering is based upon a hastily decision after reading an article about a young women who had killed herself to escape her husband. However, it is important to note that their unhappiness stems from different aspects of their relationships with their husband and therefore leads them to t...
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...s job and his family life. His strict discipline gnaws away at the affection his children hold for him (81). There is one day when Maya is doing house chores when she discovers a news clipping of a young women who set herself on fire to escape the fighting and domestic violence of her home. At the very instant, Maya decides that she would do the same, “[it shall] teach Girish a lesson (84). Maya’s suffering comes from the fact that she does not feel respected for all the work she does around the house and how she takes care of the children.
Works Cited
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In Gift from the Sea, Anne Morrow Lindbergh shares her thoughts on relationships, love, inner peace, and contentment. During her vacation by the sea to relax and detach herself from the hectic outside world, Lindbergh masterfully provides insights to a reader of any age or gender. Her poetic and flowing style allows the reader to easily absorb the themes from her meditations. She warns against the pitfalls of modern life because of what she calls hectic rhythm, as opposed to a more fluid and natural primeval rhythm. By removing herself from the outside world, she is able to look at life, love, and relationships from a different perspective. Also, she allows the natural world to help her make connections. She provides advice on how to treat our relationships with other people, and our ever evolving relationship with the outside world.
The fact that the fictional mothers and daughters of the story have unhappy marriages creates a common ground on which they can relate. However, marriage has different meanings for each generation in this book. In the mothers’ perspective, marriage is permanent and not always based on love. Especially with their marriages in China, which was a social necessity that they must secretly endure in order to be happ...
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The novel Swimming in the Monsoon Sea by Shyam Selvadurai is about the journey of living and reveals that life is not fair not to mention, it will always continue to advance with no pauses regardless of the situation.
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...her dreams, someone who allows her to do what she wants and help her stay in American for good. Tamila’s job is to find an Iranian-born husband before her visa expires. After meeting Ike a young American man, Tamila fell for him instantly, he makes her smile and blush every second they talk. Her friendship with Ike has grown stronger. And it is becoming harder for Tamila to ignore the forbidden feelings she has for him. To complicate matters, Tamila has to be brave and share her feelings of Ike with her family; she loves him too much and plans to be with him for the rest of her life. Both characters in the novels The Handmaid’s Tale and Veil of Roses have found their love, but they are too scared to share it; it might cause them their relationship.
Mishra, Vijay. "The Texts of Mother India." After Europe.Ed. Stephen Slemon and Helen Tiffin. Sydney: Dangaroo Press, 1989. 119-37.