Anita Desai's Clear Light of Day: A Journey from Degeneration to Regeneration
Authors/Creators
- 1. Professor, Department of English, Dhaka International University, Dhaka, Bangladesh
- 2. Associate Professor, Department of English, BGMEA University of Fashion & Technology, Dhaka, Bangladesh
- 3. MA Student, Department of English, Dhaka International University, Dhaka, Bangladesh
Description
Clear Light of Day by Anita Desai is one of many novels that visibly exposes an individual’s, a family's, and a nation’s miseries surrounding India’s Partition in 1947. In course of Sharma Sunanda’s stay at Lawley Road in Old Delhi she meets in turn a number of the Das family. Using a non-linear narrative, the story can move from olden times through the present to reflect on the breakdown of society, family, and emotional experiences followed by gradual recovery. The family’s struggles with historical injustices as well as questions of personal agency and the unspoken battles that they have had to face is thus vividly portrayed in all its complexity. From loneliness and resentment, Bim has passed through acceptance and her journey represents the strength to continue. Across the novel are strewn memory, identity, and themes of postcolonial displacement: while at the same time examining gender dynamics especially in Bim’s resistance to patriarchal norms. Desai focuses on how people and families cope with struggles from the past, a way of portraying a sense of sad fatalism which runs through her best-known works. With clear, natural art and a silence that remains in the end, we can only say that Clear Light of Day is a sensitive story about forgiving others, trying to make peace in a world of conflict and overcoming adversity. This paper attempts to redress the balance by demonstrating how Anita Desai portrays the transformation of melancholy and alienation into hope within the Das family. The results of this research should be to investigate how to move from forgiving oneself and remembering past lives, or in other words, aid that stage along by which all is not done in process. We must never let our pasts limit our movements. This novel is read in the light of such things. Symbolizing rebirth, this paper seeks to suggest that Desai’s novel may be viewed as aesthetically parallel to other great poetic works in which human suffering yields transformation and renewal.
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