English, asked by Ahmadharl3512, 7 months ago

Summary of untouchable by mulk raj anand in 200 words

Answers

Answered by sruthirajagopal24
56

Answer:

The entire plot gives an account of events happening in a single day in the life of Bhaka. It exposes the harsh life and struggles of the so-called Untouchable people. Bhaka doesn’t like to do toilet cleaning. He wants to study and be a learned man. Much of the novel’s success lies in the revolutionary idea of education of Untouchables. The outcasts were not allowed to draw water from wells, enter temples or basically touch anything, as everyone believed that their touch would make anything impure and corrupt. Bhaka is also mentally and physically abused by the upper caste Hindus. Pandits, or the upper-caste Hindus, are hypocrites as one of them tries to touch Sohini’s (Bhaka’s sister) breasts but claims to have been defiled when touched accidentally by an "Untouchable".

In the end of the novel, Mulk Raj Anand presents three answers to this malpractice. Bhaka is offered to accept Christianity that has no caste system, and so in this way he will no longer be an outcast. But Bhaka fears such a religion change, even if that means equal treatment and opportunity to visit a church. After that Mahatma Gandhi comes to Bhaka’s village and educates everyone on Untouchability. Bhaka loves to hear someone talking on behalf of people of his caste. In the concluding paragraphs, a person randomly comes into the scene and informs everyone about a machine (toilet-flush machine, perhaps) that will clean faecal matter automatically, ending manual collection of excreta. Bhaka thinks that this will be a solution to all his problems.

Answered by pannurekha166
7

Explanation:

The plot of Mulk Raj Anand’s novel Untouchable spotlights a boy named Bakha. Bakha lives in India. His family is not financially well-off. He cleans the streets and the bathrooms of rich people.

The caste system in India is perhaps the world's oldest social hierarchy. It is a system of stratification in which a person's occupation and social status are determined by birth.

There are still Untouchables today, unfortunately. I wish I could say that in modern times the idea is old-fashioned, and India is a more advanced society socially.Bakha, the protagonist of Mulk Raj Anand's Untouchable, is faced with three main options.

Since untouchability as a practice is entrenched in Hinduism, the obvious alternative is to convert . In Untouchable by Mulk Raj Anand, the theme of untouchability is naturally the dominant one. Here, Anand is giving us a withering critique of the age-old Indian caste system through a graphic.

In Mulk Raj Anand's novel Untouchable, originally published in the year 1935, the main character is a young man named Bakha who is considered an untouchable or "outcaste" in India's caste system

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