Abstract

Sharankumar Limbale (1956 b.) is a Marathi author who is primarily known for his autobiography Akkarmashi (1984) originally published in Marathi. Having been translated into several Indian languages, the English translation of the autobiography by Santosh Bhoomkar got published by Oxford University Press in 2003. This paper aims at the portrayal of the abject poverty, utter helplessness, and biases prevalent in the socio-cultural milieus while offering contemplation to the practices of untouchability or discrimination based on caste, like how the minds of the people in a particular culture or society are trained to internalize the particular behavioural patterns of the dominating class of society. The paper also analyzes the ironic attitude of the men of upper-caste like how do they wish to cherish the physical charm of the beautiful women of the outcastes secretly, whereas socially they seek complete dissociation from them. Everything leads to the ostracization of the outcastes overtly and the outcastes stop reacting to the discriminatory patterns of behaviour, thus, their indifference to these becomes their habit turning them senseless.

Highlights

  • In his autobiography The Outcaste, Sharan Kumar Limbale presents the sum of varied experiences since his childhood

  • As Limbale’s family lived in the village Maharwada,where the lower-caste people were pushed to peripheries and the villagers being the low caste were supposed to do odd jobs like removing the dead animals of the upper caste people, skinning the dead animals, sweeping the village streets, and working as labourers even unpaid ones

  • The novelist reveals that how the mindsets of the low caste people consider the favourable norms of the dominating class justified in the society and whatever condition they are in, find convinced

Read more

Summary

Introduction

In his autobiography The Outcaste, Sharan Kumar Limbale presents the sum of varied experiences since his childhood. Being low-caste, Mahars were considered untouchables in society.

Objectives
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call