English, asked by aparnachowdhury1279, 1 month ago

how does rk narayan present different aspects of a river in his poem?​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
2

Answer:

Aquatic ecosystems are all living and non-living elements and the relationship between them, of a water-based environment [5]. ... As a type, aquatic ecosystems can be classified again into three varieties (inland, estuarine and marine), defined by the kind of water with which organisms interact.

Explanation:

tell me about his which poem u r asking

Answered by mrgoodb62
14

Answer:

Manu Bhattathiri’s first novel, The Town That Laughed, evokes the time-worn literary device of weaving a fictional narrative through the diverse spaces and assortment of characters in a small town. Sundara Ramaswamy’s landmark Tamil novel Oru Puliyamarathin Kathai is a remarkable portrait of Nagercoil, a town near the southernmost tip of peninsular India, in the first decade after independence. In English, we have R.K. Narayan’s finely imagined small town, Malgudi. The small-town novel offers an ideal canvas to explore certain dimensions of collective existence—sociology, culture and politics—while at the same time charting the destinies of individual characters.

The Town That Laughed fits right into this genre, but with a greater focus on the psychology of individuals. This story of Karuthupuzha, a town by a river of the same name, travels through many typical sites: apart from private residences, it takes in the riverbank, bus stand, tea stall, police station, toddy shop, photo studio, market street, barber shop, primary school, orchards and the myriad pathways that inter-link these locations. But the main narrative is so intensely focused on people that the town doesn’t seem to have a story of its own.

Similar questions