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Rich Like Us

Name: Alisa Rahman


Course: B.A.(Hons.) English
Semester:IV
Subject: Indian Writing in English Assignment for Unit 1
Submitted to: Prof. Shubhy Abidi
THE PORTRAYAL OF WOMEN
Indian journalist and novelist, Nayantara Sehgal’s works elucidate crises of
India’s elite on an individual level amid settings of political upheaval. Hailing
from a strong political background and family of freedom fighters, Nayantara
Sehgal is one of the most prolific writers who perpetuate her pertinence as a
humanist with oblivious political as well as feminist concerns. Her literary canon
chronicles the political scene with predominance in man-woman relationships
and the marginalised women of the society.

Nayantara’s Sehgal’s novel, Rich Like Us is foregrounded in the political


background of emergency and sketches the life of the ‘doubly marginalised
women’, Rose and Mona as co-wives and Sonali, an unmarried former IAS officer.
The travail of women in a unit of family and society has been discoursed in her
novel. The sexist bias in the overtly patriarchal society makes the mere existence
of women completely subordinate. A woman’s acceptance in a society is only
validated by marriage and her capability of being a docile wife.

Well, Rose and Mona, both are exploited by their husband Ram Swarup who
perceives his relationships prioritising his own selfish benefit and insensitive
fulfilment. Mona, his first wife’s feelings, faces a callous retort when Ram brings
along an English wife, Rose. Mona has bore a son of Ram already and this fact
buoys the incompassionate severity of Ram, someone who is staunchly strong
rooted in the patriarchal system of male supremacy. On the other hand, Rose
after being fully ensnared in love and is coated with ‘emotional labyrinth’ by
Ram, faces the revelation about Ram’s truth, that he has a wife and a son already.
She was in an oblivious shock and Ram was tart enough to say, “My religion lets
a man have more than one wife.”

Though Rose is vexed, she abandons her family and leaves with Ram to an
absolutely strange land with aberrant culture. So magnetically drawn towards
Ram, she crosses all racial and class hurdles just to be designated as ‘a usurper’.
She never gets the ratification of the mistress of the house and endured disgrace
and hostility. Ram’s father said, when ram and rose came before him the first
time, “Take that woman out of my sight.”

When Rose complains about her mental saturation of the drama of the household
with two wives, Ram has the temerity to be humorous with his answers
defending polygamy foregrounded in the religious scriptures, “Lord Krishna
had three hundred.” We can conjecture well how women were looted off their
rights and equality by being sharers of their common husband and being
neglected anyhow with no legally liable backup until it was the Hindu Code Bill
passed in 1955.

An interesting event occurs when Ram gets infatuated by Marcella, a young,


beautiful, upper class British lady and falls deeply in love with her. His keen
ensnarement with Marcella marks the empathetic synchronisation of Mona’s
feelings in Rose; how it feels to be cheated on. Later, Ram is so enmeshed with
other English ladies, that he does not get the time to spend time with his wife
Mona who is on death-bed suffering from cancer. Such are the terrible fates of
wives. Sehgal portrays a baroque description of the plightful state of women in
order to acknowledge the problems inside out instead of heading onto a full-
fledged remedy without any fruitful awareness.

Some questions may arise as to, was it completely Ram’s patriarchal stronghold
that agonised the fate of Rose and Mona? I think the prevailing patriarchy can be
a magic weapon for the male population but throughout the ages it has also
endorsed Stockholm Syndrome in women. They have grown accustomed to the
havoc of patriarchy wreaking on them and have built a defensive cloak around
them regarding the patriarchal system. In such a way, we can justify the fatalism
in Rose’s yielding to Ram’s influence and her decision to sail to India. She
overlooked the consequence of her fate despite knowing well the truth: “ She
knows it is walking blind fold off a gang plank into the deep blue sea.” Same
do we witness in Mona’s case. Never does she accuse her husband to be disloyal
but laments with aid to her belief in astrology and stars, resorting to “calling
upon almighty to spell out what she had done in this or past lives to deserve
such outrageous treatment.” But we also must gauge on the basis of the
preponderate loom of misogynistic male-centric society which would not just
allow the women to take a stand even if they want to.

We also come across strong figures like Sonali, one of the two protagonists and a
young, unmarried, highly educated, civil servant. We can probably give the credit
of her strength to the privileges she is born into as a member of the upper class
strata. Nonetheless, in contrast with her sister who is the epitome of the
stereotypical femininity, she emerges as a character defying conventions. She
rejects the adherence of the concept of marriage to her life because the Oxford
alumni is well aware of the limitations she would face in the bondage of marriage
which can bring ramifications in her priority of venturing into finding the truth
and logic in her ever-changing homeland. We as well see Nishi, Dev’s wife or
rather Ram’s daughter-in-law, as a woman who elevated herself from grounded
sands of nowhere to sharing a dinner table with political and business aristocrats.
The novel amalgamated subtly the two social impositions of women in two
different eras.

Sehgal’s feministic approach and sheer abhorrence for chauvinistic view of the
society breaks through this novel. Rich Like Us makes a sustained and systematic
effort to demolish deeply sculpted misogynistic attitudes and upholds Sehgal’s
commitment to man-woman relationship which must be based on mutual trust
and honest communication as two equal individuals.

As Nayantara Sehgal opines:

"I try to create the virtuous woman - the Modem Sita, if you like. My
women are strivers, and aspirers towards freedom, towards goodness,
towards a compassionate world.”
THE PLAGIARISM REPORT:

UNIQUE: 100%
PLAGIARISED: 0%

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