VOL 2 ; ISSUE 6 - PUNE RESEARCH SCHOLAR (ISSN 2455-314X) JIF 2.46
VOL 2 ; ISSUE 6 - PUNE RESEARCH SCHOLAR (ISSN 2455-314X) JIF 2.46
VOL 2 ; ISSUE 6 - PUNE RESEARCH SCHOLAR (ISSN 2455-314X) JIF 2.46
The paper presents the theme of identity crisis which plays a pivotal aspect of the techno-thematic network of the Indian English fiction. The crisis of identity is the thematic design of Hariharan’s When Dreams Travel.
The paper also focuses on the existence of identity crisis. When Dreams Travel is mainly about Shahrzad’s search for her story. It is the quest for love and power and the quest for identity is identified with the journey of mind along times and spaces. Shahrzad, with her courage and untiring will finds her self- identity which is suppressed by Shahryar. And at last she also warns her present generation to remain alert to her forebodings so that they can accept the challenge when their turn comes. The paper concludes by stating that identity crisis is the most important conflict that people face in their life. But one can surely find their
VOL 2 ; ISSUE 6 - PUNE RESEARCH SCHOLAR (ISSN 2455-314X) JIF 2.46
Aravind Adiga was
born in India
in 1974 , and
educated in India
and Australia. His debut
novel The White
Tiger was published
in 2008 and
won the man booker
prize award for
fiction in the
same year. Adiga was fourth one
to achieve this Award. In this novel , Adiga
deliberately portrays how
the wealthy people
of light India
oppress the poor
people of dark
India and try
to reveal the
unspoken words of
the people who are
living in the darkness. He also
examines the class
struggle of the
Indian people in the
globalized world. The novel
explores various issues
on the basis
of caste, culture, religion,
education, occupation and economy
and depicts the
struggling of the
Indian society for
its socio-economic equality. The
present paper makes
an attempt to
analyze how the
corruption corrupts the
minds of the
common people that
leads the society
to indulge in
criminal offenses.
Key Words: globalized, socio-economic, corruption.
VOL 2 ; ISSUE 6 - PUNE RESEARCH SCHOLAR (ISSN 2455-314X) JIF 2.46
This article certainly expresses the idea of human love and affection in
Jane Eyre. The author of the novel feels that the condition of human love is
true which changes all the time of the various circumstances. Charlotte Bronte
always attempts to exhibit the power of positivism and the evil of negativism
through the infinitive attachment of human love with external conflicts. The
author of this novel describes the perspectives of genuine love which makes the
women to be more submissive to the world of reality and the entity. The women
in the novel expect from the male chauvinistic society to free the women in all
the aspects of individual development. The authentic love may not search for
the materialistic development rather it would seek for the internal happiness
and ecstasy of serenity with the love of eternity. The characters in the novel
do not believe in the act bestowing or obtaining the jewels, money, wealth,
power, authority, and position. The author feels and narrates that the ideal
union of marriage should possess the authentic sense of human love and dignity,
which must exist invariably in all the minds of human beings. Marriage without
love is spiritless and meaningless to the core of human relationship between
men and women. Hence the writer feels the duplicity of marriage and love. Jane
emphasizes that she would acknowledge the proposal and she will accept the
genuine lover who fulfils the expectation of true love.
Keywords: Ideal Marriage, Authentic Love, Divine Love, Equality, Relationship between Men and Women
VOL 2 ; ISSUE 6 - PUNE RESEARCH SCHOLAR (ISSN 2455-314X) JIF 2.46
Written sometime in the early 1970s and published in 2008, The Wandering Falcon is a fictional piece of work that charts a slow meandering course through the lawless frontiers. Undercurrents of danger have always coursed through its veins but recent events have bestowed a more menacing look and feel to the wild west of Pakistan. Jamil Ahmad’s The Wandering Falcon limns tribal customs with a storyteller’s skill, a discerning eye and austere prose worthy of the environment depicted here, giving Western readers a window to the otherwise inaccessible. Jamil Ahmad takes us to the high desert and mountains of a region crisscrossed by hundreds of nomadic tribes for thousands of years. We read of lovers fleeing the deadly punishment of their tribal group, of women desperate for affection, buried under customs and habits millenniums old, of men of honor living lives of crime, of tribal members returning from exile who must carefully navigate each clan and sub-clan in order to stay honorable and sometimes to say alive. In expressing so, Jamil Ahmad seems to be endowed with the sound knowledge of storytelling.
Keywords The Wandering Falcon, Storytelling, Tribal Identity, Survival as the ultimate option
VOL 2 ; ISSUE 6 - PUNE RESEARCH SCHOLAR (ISSN 2455-314X) JIF 2.46
In the canon of literary work, Protagonists play a crucial role. On a practical level, they are identical in literature and life. They perform structural functions in the novel. In fact, the protagonist is the soul of the story. The present paper highlights the significance of the term ‘protagonist’ and how he works as a prime mover or the driver of the story and forces the action ahead. In a real sense, protagonist is the backbone and irresistible force of the story. He takes the initiative in performing the task which serves as the motivation to change the status quo. It would not an exaggeration if we say that without a protagonist, the story would have no directed drive. The researcher tries to explore the classification of the characters and the origin and role of the protagonists in successfully moving the narrative of the story. The researcher conveys that the protagonist is the central character who strives to achieve a specific goal with a determination that generates the significant action of the novel.
Key Words: Protagonist, prime mover, plot, literary work, origin, classification of characters, role of the protagonists etc.
VOL 2 ; ISSUE 6 - PUNE RESEARCH SCHOLAR (ISSN 2455-314X) JIF 2.46
This paper deeply analyses the projection of dynamics of self and society
in the works of D.H. Lawrence. He is an excellent artist who presented
something to his society by reflecting on his personal and social experiences
in shaping of all his major novels where the dynamics of self and society are
placed side by side. Lawrence’s effort for the liberation of human spirit is
hailed in all respects through this article.
VOL 2 ; ISSUE 6 - PUNE RESEARCH SCHOLAR (ISSN 2455-314X) JIF 2.46
Margaret Atwood, a famous Canadian novelist, is widely known in the world for her handling of ‘feminist’ and science fiction themes. Her early works are also inspired by Canadian nationalism. But from the very start of her career we can see a gradual intensity in her environmental concerns, in her novels as well as in her poetry and short story collections. Therefore her works easily lend themselves to an ecocritical reading. Ecocriticism is a recent approach in literary criticism, in succession of the various critical approaches we designate under ‘literary theory’. Keeping the ecocritical approach in mind, this paper attempts to consider the images of pollution – land, water, air etc. – that occur in the novelistic descriptions of Margaret Atwood.
Key- words:- Margaret Atwood – Canadian woman novelist – feminism – Canadian Nationalism – environmental concern – images of pollution – ecocriticism.
VOL 2 ; ISSUE 6 - PUNE RESEARCH SCHOLAR (ISSN 2455-314X) JIF 2.46
In Indian Constitution specified the preamble, fundamental rights, and more explicit laid down the Directive Principles of State Policy to welfare for weaker section in the society. The important role of Judiciary and monitoring body of National and State level Commissions to protect the interest of the Scheduled Tribes in India. It also provides the basic necessities right to citizen of India i.e., Right to life and Personal Liberty which as specified under articles 21 of the Indian constitution. The Right to life is constitutional provision for the basic necessities right for all round development of Scheduled Tribes in the society.
According to Article 21, every Citizen of India is entitled to personal liberty except through the procedure prescribed by law but, procedure should not be unjust, unfair and unreasonable. This article assures every Citizen including scheduled tribes are free from exploitation, and protect their right to life. It ensure by state with under obligation of constitutional Norms to protect from the violation of fundamental right of any individual or especially from the scheduled tribes of the society. At present under the mask of Liberalization, Privatization and Globalization, the Welfare State is escaping from its responsibility to protection of Scheduled Tribes. The present research paper discussed the Right to life and Personal Liberty which as specified under articles 21 and there basic necessities rights for protections to the scheduled tribes particularly Indian constitution provisions.
Keyword: Right to life, Right to Liberty, Basic necessities, Social Justice, Economic Justice.
VOL 2 ; ISSUE 6 - PUNE RESEARCH SCHOLAR (ISSN 2455-314X) JIF 2.46
The Government of Maharashtra has declared a "drought-like
condition" in 14,708 of the state's 43,000 villages.This
is the second consecutive year of drought in Maharashtra. In fact, the state
has experienced three such calamities in the last four years.The Marathwada
region has been worst-hit, with a drought-like condition declared in every
single village. A good number of 8,522 villages in the region have been
impacted. This accounts for 58% of the drought area in the state.Drought
conditions have hit consumption in rural markets, with volume growth slowing to
3-4 per cent in the past two quarters, compared with the 10 per cent growth at
the start of financial year 2016. This is wicked news for FMCG companies, which
are looking to rural consumption to fuel demand as the volume growth in urban
consumption had slowed down a year ago.
Keywords: FMCG, Drought Prone Area, Rural Maharashtra, Economic Analysis
VOL 2 ; ISSUE 6 - PUNE RESEARCH SCHOLAR (ISSN 2455-314X) JIF 2.46
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VOL 2 ; ISSUE 6 - PUNE RESEARCH SCHOLAR (ISSN 2455-314X) JIF 2.46
English is no more the patrimony of the Anglo Saxons. It is now a universal
public property. By the British colonial train, it travelled almost the entire
world, came in touch with myriad people and their languages, and enriched
itself as the world’s number one language. Not only as a comfortable means of
communication between the peoples of the opposite poles and hemispheres, but
also as a medium of creative writing has English been deliberately taken up by
writers of the formerly colonized countries. The number is multiplying with the
rise of Postcolonial / Diaspora consciousness.
VOL 2 ; ISSUE 6 - PUNE RESEARCH SCHOLAR (ISSN 2455-314X) JIF 2.46
Urbanization is taking place at a faster rate in India.
Population residing in urban areas in India, according to
1901 census, was 11.4%. This count increased to 28.53% according to 2001
census, and crossing 30% as per 2011 census, standing at 31.16%
(en.wikipedia.org). Location Quotients are frequently used in demography,
economics and any type of location analysis. The location quotient is an index
for comparing the importance of a phenomenon’s share with the general
phenomenon over a certain area (IB Geography, www.geoib.com). Present paper is based on the analysis of
location quotient of concentration index of urban population in Akola district.
Keywords Urban population, concentration, location quotient, growth
VOL 2 ; ISSUE 6 - PUNE RESEARCH SCHOLAR (ISSN 2455-314X) JIF 2.46
This manuscript has
been in black and white on the beginning of qualitative and quantitative
records composed from inferior mine and discussed effort membership of ethnic
women in India in a descriptive manner. The clannish women get been make equal
partners with ethnic men in the involvement to household economy. reasonably
habitually their women act other real labour in their agricultural fields and
wood than that of the ancestral men. clannish women give birth to regularly
enjoyed a senior group grade in their have communities than Indian women in
general. about of the tribes like Khasi in Mizoram and Meghalaya are
matriarchal. However, the literacy value in the company of the tribe’s and
supplementary subsequently in issue of clannish women is very stumpy and this
is besides coupled with unfortunate dietetic and health class surrounded by the
tribal. The guess of poverty prepared by preparation agency for the day 1993-94
shows that 51.92 percent rural and 41.4 percent city Scheduled Tribes were
quite live below the poverty line. They are engaged in a mixture of occupations
like hunting shifting agriculture to complete crop growing and rural crafts. A
identical negligible percent is engaged in non-agricultural actions The
Scheduled Tribes constitute 8.2% of India’s add up population. In the entire
nearby are 700 Scheduled Tribes in India. States of Chhattisgarh,
Jharkhand, Madhya Pradesh and Orissa every one of self-possessed tolerate about
40% of the equal ethnic people of the country.
VOL 2 ; ISSUE 6 - PUNE RESEARCH SCHOLAR (ISSN 2455-314X) JIF 2.46
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