Marital Discord in Anita Desaias Novels

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Mohini Sharma
Mohini Sharma

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Abstract

Women’s inscription continues to engage a place of substance for more reasons than one. It has questioned the accessible viewpoints which are fundamentally patriarchal. All women’s writing need not necessarily be feminist. But feminist interpretations can appear through absence and denial. The sufferings of Indian women, marital discord, existentialism, annoyance are the major themes of feminist writing. Female quest for individuality has been a pet theme for many a woman novelist. After the Second World War, it has become possible that women novelists of quality have become inspirational for Indian English fiction.

References

16 Cites in Article
  1. Anita Desai,Cry (1980). the Peacock.
  2. Anita Desai,Cry (1963). the Peacock.
  3. Jasbir Jain (1982). Anita Desai' an essay published in Indian English Novelists: An Anthology of Critical Essays.
  4. Naresh Jain (1998). Women In Indo-Anglian Fiction (Tradition and Modernity).
  5. Uma Jha,Shankar,Pujari (1996). Modernity, Nation, and Women.
  6. Stewart Justman (2009). The Apple of Discord.
  7. Devindra Kohli,Melanie Just,Maria (2008). Anita Desai (Critical Perspectives).
  8. Suresh Kohli (1992). Home, World.
  9. S Paul (1998). Cry, the Peacock: A Critical Study.
  10. Madhusudan Prasad,Anita Desai (1981). The Novelist.
  11. Atma Ram (1977). An interview with Anita Desai.
  12. A Rao,Krishna (1984). Voices in the city: A Study.
  13. Rao Vimala,Anita Desai (1978). s Where Shall We Go This Summer? An Analysis.
  14. R Sharma,Anita Desai (1981). Unknown Title.
  15. K Srinivasa Iyengar (1984). Indian Writing In English.
  16. K Surenran (2002). Women's Writing in India: New Perspectives.

Funding

No external funding was declared for this work.

Conflict of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Ethical Approval

No ethics committee approval was required for this article type.

Data Availability

Not applicable for this article.

How to Cite This Article

Mohini Sharma. 2013. \u201cMarital Discord in Anita Desaias Novels\u201d. Global Journal of Human-Social Science - G: Linguistics & Education GJHSS-G Volume 13 (GJHSS Volume 13 Issue G10): .

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GJHSS Volume 13 Issue G10
Pg. 85- 92
Journal Specifications

Crossref Journal DOI 10.17406/GJHSS

Print ISSN 0975-587X

e-ISSN 2249-460X

Keywords
Version of record

v1.2

Issue date

August 5, 2013

Language
en
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Women’s inscription continues to engage a place of substance for more reasons than one. It has questioned the accessible viewpoints which are fundamentally patriarchal. All women’s writing need not necessarily be feminist. But feminist interpretations can appear through absence and denial. The sufferings of Indian women, marital discord, existentialism, annoyance are the major themes of feminist writing. Female quest for individuality has been a pet theme for many a woman novelist. After the Second World War, it has become possible that women novelists of quality have become inspirational for Indian English fiction.

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Marital Discord in Anita Desaias Novels

Mohini Sharma
Mohini Sharma

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