Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Social Resistance in Mulk Raj Anand’s Untouchable
View through CrossRef
Mulk Raj Anand was a revolutionary writer of the twentieth century India who changed the mode of writing and thinking in the field of Indian fiction writing. The novelists before him, who had written fiction, wrote the fictional side of life which were ideal and romantic in nature. There were a smaller number of issues of the society. Mulk Raj Anand’s writing brought revolutionary change in the field of fiction writing. He wrote the novels for the sake of untouchables and the poor. He raised the issues of casteism, capitalism, feudalism, colonialism and imperialism through his novels. In Untouchable, he has attacked one of the worst social evils of the Indian society which was ignored by the previous writers and that is blot on Indian society, culture and tradition that has colonized eighty five percent people of Indian society. This sensibility has ruined creativity of Indian people. Casteism and untouchability are the blots on the face of humanity. Anand seems fighting for the liberty, equality and justice of the untouchables and the poor. He appealed for the basic human rights and needs in the newly emerging civil structure of colonial and post-independence India. He had the opinion among all the fundamental rights that human dignity is the highest. Bakha, the leading character, had the resistance in the mind but he could not express it due to the fear of his caste. Bakha is a metaphor for all the untouchables of India.
Title: Social Resistance in Mulk Raj Anand’s Untouchable
Description:
Mulk Raj Anand was a revolutionary writer of the twentieth century India who changed the mode of writing and thinking in the field of Indian fiction writing.
The novelists before him, who had written fiction, wrote the fictional side of life which were ideal and romantic in nature.
There were a smaller number of issues of the society.
Mulk Raj Anand’s writing brought revolutionary change in the field of fiction writing.
He wrote the novels for the sake of untouchables and the poor.
He raised the issues of casteism, capitalism, feudalism, colonialism and imperialism through his novels.
In Untouchable, he has attacked one of the worst social evils of the Indian society which was ignored by the previous writers and that is blot on Indian society, culture and tradition that has colonized eighty five percent people of Indian society.
This sensibility has ruined creativity of Indian people.
Casteism and untouchability are the blots on the face of humanity.
Anand seems fighting for the liberty, equality and justice of the untouchables and the poor.
He appealed for the basic human rights and needs in the newly emerging civil structure of colonial and post-independence India.
He had the opinion among all the fundamental rights that human dignity is the highest.
Bakha, the leading character, had the resistance in the mind but he could not express it due to the fear of his caste.
Bakha is a metaphor for all the untouchables of India.
Related Results
A Critical Study of Minor Characters in the Select Short Stories of Mulk Raj Anand
A Critical Study of Minor Characters in the Select Short Stories of Mulk Raj Anand
Abstract
In the short stories of Mulk Raj Anand, the character’s psyche is revealed to the readers. Anand focuses on the psyche of a character and relatively develop...
Evolution of Antimicrobial Resistance in Community vs. Hospital-Acquired Infections
Evolution of Antimicrobial Resistance in Community vs. Hospital-Acquired Infections
Abstract
Introduction
Hospitals are high-risk environments for infections. Despite the global recognition of these pathogens, few studies compare microorganisms from community-acqu...
Caste, Class, and Consciousness: The Socio-Cultural Realism in the Select Works of Mulk Raj Anand
Caste, Class, and Consciousness: The Socio-Cultural Realism in the Select Works of Mulk Raj Anand
This paper explores the interwoven themes of caste, class, and consciousness in the select novels of Mulk Raj Anand, with particular focus on Untouchable (1935), Coolie (1936), and...
Manual Scavenging and the Issue of Untouchability in Mulk Raj Anand’s Untouchable
Manual Scavenging and the Issue of Untouchability in Mulk Raj Anand’s Untouchable
Untouchability is an evil social menace, where certain group of people are discriminated or alienated based on their caste, class or job from the mainstream sections of the society...
Nizam al-Mulk Remembered
Nizam al-Mulk Remembered
The focus in the fifth and final chapter is on the afterlife of Nizam al-Mulk, of his legacy as well as of his representations. By the late fifteenth century, in Timurid Iran, Niza...
Representations of Nizam al-Mulk
Representations of Nizam al-Mulk
Who was Nizam al-Mulk? In a similar way to ‘Umar II and Charlemagne, Nizam al-Mulk is praised in medieval historiography not just for his political acumen, but also for his knowled...
The Security Situation in the Pusht-e Kuh Government in the Late Qajar Era and the Role of Gholam Hossein Khan Shahab al-Mulk in It
The Security Situation in the Pusht-e Kuh Government in the Late Qajar Era and the Role of Gholam Hossein Khan Shahab al-Mulk in It
In the final third of the Qajar period, the Pusht-e Kuh government faced various vulnerabilities, threats, and security incidents. Border disputes with the Ottoman Empire, internal...
HUMANISM IN THE NOVELS OF MULK RAJ ANAND
HUMANISM IN THE NOVELS OF MULK RAJ ANAND
Humanism that introduced in the 14th century is in fact a movement which highlighted on the exploration of human being in this world. The main idea of humanism is to focus on how t...

