How does mr. roy highlight and criticize social problem in the god of small things?
Answers
Answered by
1
This article foregrounds Arundhati Roy’s postcolonial ecofeminist perspective in her novel The God of Small Things
(1997). Roy has become recognized as an environmental and political
activist through her criticism of postcolonial India’s mal-development.
Although she is cynical about state-sponsored development projects, her
criticism is focused not on the idea of development per se, but on the
hierarchy of dualisms that legitimizes the exploitation of nature by the
human, of women by men and of the oppressed by the powerful. The God of Small Things
interrogates the ways such hierarchies operate through mechanisms such
as patriarchical ideology and an apparently rational economic logic.
Roy’s critique of environmental exploitation in postcolonial India
reveals the interconnectedness of ecological deterioration and
oppression based on gender, class and race. Such exploitation calls for
an examination of postcolonial environment issues from an ecofeminist
viewpoint. The convergence of postcolonialism with ecofeminism – what is
here called postcolonial ecofeminism – is exemplified in Roy’s novel.
Similar questions
Math,
7 months ago
Political Science,
7 months ago
English,
1 year ago
English,
1 year ago
Social Sciences,
1 year ago
Math,
1 year ago