Saturday, 24 October 2015

R.K.Narayan as a novelist

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Name: -   Gohel    Ankita     Kishobhai 
Roll no: - 14
Paper Name: - Indian   Writing   in   English 
Topic: -   R .K Narayana   as   a   novelist
Guide: - Heena   ma’am   zala
Submitted: - smt.  Gardi m.k   Bhavanagar,   Department    of   English.
Year:- 2015-17.                                                                                                                                               R. R.K Narayana as  a  novelist
                              
Introduction  :-

     R.K. Narayan is one of the most famous and widely read Indian novelists. His stories were grounded in a compassionate humanism and celebrated the humor and energy of ordinary life.R.K. Narayan was born on October 10, 1906 in Madras. His father was a provincial head master. R.K. Narayan spent his early childhood with his maternal grandmother, Parvathi in Madras and used to spend only a few weeks each summer visiting his parents and siblings. R.K. Narayan studied for eight years at Lutheran Mission School close to his grandmother's house in Madras, also for a short time at the CRC High School. When his father was appointed headmaster of the Maharajah's High School in Mysore, R.K. Narayan moved back in with his parents. He obtained his bachelor's degree from the University of Mysore.
                                     R.K. Narayan began his writing career with Swami and Friends in 1935. Most of his work including Swami and friends is set in the fictional town of Malgudi which captures everything Indian while having a unique identity of its own. R.K. Narayan's writing style was marked by simplicity and subtle humor. He told stories of ordinary people trying to live their simple lives in a changing world.
                     R.K. Narayan's famous works include The Bachelor of Arts (1937), The Dark Room (1938), The English Teacher (1945), The Financial Ex), pert (1952), The Guide (1958), The Man-Eater of Malgudi (1961), The Vendor of Sweets (1967), Malgudi Days (1982 and The Grandmother's Tale (1993).R.K. Narayan won numerous awards and honors for his works. These include: Sahitya Akademi Award for The Guide in 1958; Padma Bhushan in 1964; and AC Benson Medal by the Royal Society of Literature in 1980; R.K. Narayan was elected an honorary member of the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters in 1982. He was nominated to the Rajya Sabha in 1989. Besides, he was also conferred honorary doctorates by the University of Mysore, Delhi University.
                                                                  

R. K Narayana’s   famous works



1) The  Bacholar  of  arts ( 1937)
2) The  dark  room (1938)
3) The  English  Teacher ( 1945)
4)The   Financial  experts (1952)
5)The   Guide (1958)
6)The  man  Easter   of   malgudi (1961)
7)The   vendor  of  sweet (1967)
8)Malgudi  Days (1982)
9) The   grandmother ‘s Tale        
10)Swami   and   Friends ( 1935)

                               Narayan's writing technique was unpretentious with a natural element of humor about it. It focused on ordinary people, reminding the reader of next-door neighbors, cousins and the like, thereby providing a greater ability to relate to the topic. Unlike his national contemporaries, he was able to write about the intricacies of Indian society without having to modify his characteristic simplicity to conform to trends and fashions in fiction writing. He also employed the use of nuanced dialog prose with gentle Tamil overtones based on the nature of his characters. Critics have considered Narayan to be the Indian Chekhov, due to the similarities in their writings, the simplicity and the gentle beauty and humor in tragic situations. Greene considered Narayan to be more similar to Chekhov than any Indian writer. Anthony West of The New Yorker considered Narayan's writings to be of the realism variety of Nikolai Gogol.
                    According to Pulitzer Prize winner Jhumpa Lahiri, Narayan's short stories have the same captivating feeling as his novels, with most of them less than ten pages long, and taking about as many minutes to read. She adds that between the title sentence and the end, Narayan provides the reader something novelists struggle to achieve in hundreds more pages: a complete insight to the lives of his characters. These characteristics and abilities led Lahiri to classify him as belonging to the pantheon of short-story geniuses that include O. Henry, Frank O'Connor and Flannery O'Connor. Lahiri also compares him to Guy De Maupassant for their ability to compress the narrative without losing the story, and the common themes of middle-class life written with an unyielding and unpitying vision.
                Critics have noted that Narayan's writings tend to be more descriptive and less analytical; the objective style, rooted in a detached spirit, providing for a more authentic and realistic narration. His attitude, coupled with his perception of life, provided a unique ability to fuse characters and actions, and an ability to use ordinary events to create a connection in the mind of the reader. A significant contributor to his writing style was his creation of Malgudi, a stereotypical small town, where the standard norms of superstition and tradition apply.  Narayan's writing style was often compared to that of William Faulkner since both their works brought out the humour and energy of ordinary life while displaying compassionate humanism. The similarities also extended to their juxtaposing of the demands of society against the confusions of individuality. Although their approach to subjects was similar, their   method   was   different from another novelist. .
1) Swami  and   Friends:-

                             Swami  and Friends  were  given an  early  sight of the humor  which  runs  through  Narayan’s  novels.One of  the features  of  British  colonialism   was the   export of cricket, a game which strikes North  Americans as  being  opaque  and  slow  moving.But  atthetime  that  Swami was written, cricket  was  more  than justasport– it stood ,quite absurdly, for  the  whole ethos  of an empire .Thus although  we  see  Swami  raised  to heights of indignation by a political orator  laments  the  passivity of his countrymen which  has  allowed  them  to  be dominated by an alien power ,when  it  comes  to  cricket  the  boy is  sufficiently  enthusiastic to  spend    some time  trying  to  explain what  the  game  is  all  about  to  his  aged  grandmother. This comic scene, like so much of Narayan’s humor, has a strong poignancy. The grandmother   represents  the  old  India , a world in  which cricket  is  not  played.Her  ignorance  of  the  rules  is  a vivid metaphor  for  the  extent  to  which  the  old  and  the new India  are  different  worlds.The  cricket  episode  also  allows Narayan   to  portray  the  naive  aspirations  of  the  boys.This  is  a  familiar  the  main  many  of  his  works, where some any  of  the characters  are  striving  for something which  is  often just  beyond   their   grasp.
 2)  The    Guide :-                                                                                                                                                                       R.k   guide a novel ( 1958)  is  narayan’s   The    written in such  a  socio economic   context  when India  was  still  a tradition  based  country   with   the majority  of    the   population  living  in  village  were   mostiy  uneducated , simple, gullible  and   superstitious. Children  here  grew up hearing   legends  and  myths  of  many  gods, goddesses  and sages, which  entered  into  their  intelligentsia  And  developed  their  aesthetic  senses and moral values. Narayan himself  may  have  heard  many  such  stories  from  her grandmother  of  the novel in point. Thus may have had a firsthand experience of these believes of the village people. Hence, he  chooses  such  a  village  to  unfold  the story  he  guide  is  set  in malgudi  (a fictional town created by narayana), and  it  opens  with  its protagonist, recently released  from  prison, sitting  on  a granite  slab beside an ancient  shrine  on  a bank of the river   sarayu, on the  other bank  of  which  is  situated  the village  Mangal , where people  are  so  simple  and  gullible  as  to be  made  to  accept for  granted  even  the  most  unbelievable  things. It is a man called  velan  from this village, who  first  mistakes  raju  for a saint  and  gradually  makes  other  people  of  his  village believe  raju  to  be  a  saint  telling  them  of  the  miracle  that he  believes  raju  has  performed  to solve a crucial  problem of  his  family. Raju, perhaps already having a lesson of his misdeeds,feels reluctant to play the role assigned by Velan, but when  Velan  tells  Raju  his  problem  for  a solution, Raju cannot  help  asserting his old habit of getting “involved in other  people’s  interests  and  activities” . Irritated by the greatness  thrust upon him, Raju  tells Velan  to   bring  his   sister  the   next  day  and   thus   reluctantly  accepted   a   position   superior  to  velen.
3)Malgudi   Days :-

                 Malgudi day is a collection of   32   short funny   and   witty stories. Its   author  as  a  I  have  mentioned  in  the  tittle   is  r.k  narayana . the   stories  happen  in  malpudi  ,an  imaginary  town  located  somewhere  on  the  bank  of  sarayu(a  river  in south  India ). Even  though  it is  common  to  call  malgudi  , an  imaginary   town  , you   can  trace  it  to   any  village  in  south    India. The stories carry the scent and sounds   of   these villages.
                    Rather   than   revolving around   a   particular   plot   their stories   describes. The relationship between member and   family. the  various  social  taboo  prevalent  in a the   mid  nineties . all  the    stories  will   seem  faintly  similar  but  they  are   vastly  different  from each other . The stories deals with the   most   ordinary men and women   and   that   make   stories   extraordinary.
 Conclusion :-
                                             His four  novels  in  this  volume  form  the  first  phase of Narayan’s  career  as a novelist.In them we  see the author working  through  a number  of  concerns  which, as  a young man,   were very  much on his mind. These include boyhood  (Swami and  Friends), education  and  the finding of a role  in life (The Bachelor  of  Arts), and marriage (The Dark  Room  and The  English Teacher) .In these  early  novels, we  also  see the  development  of Narayan as a writer.

                   






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