Abstract

Kiran Desai was born in 1971 and educated in India, England and the United States. She studied creative writing at Columbia University, where she was the recipient of a Woolrich fellowship. Her work has appeared in The New Yorker and Salman Rushdie's anthology Mirrorwork: Fifty years of Indian Writing. In 2006 Desai won the MAN Booker Prize for her novel The Inheritance of Loss. Kiran Desai depicts the contemporary society in terms of psychological and social realism with about to happen fact. Kiran Desai’s debut novel Hullaballoo in the Guava Orchard is based on magical realism. Kiran Desai is the daughter of Anita Desai, herself short-listed for the booker prize on three occasions. She was born in Chandigarh, and spent the early years of her life in Pune and Mumbai. She studied in the Cathedral and John Connon school. She left India at 14, and she and her mother then lived in England for a year, and then moved to the United States, where she studied creative writing at bennington college, hollins university and columbia university. Desai resides in the United States, where she is a permanent resident. The aim to present this thesis is to analyze the term magic realism in Kiran Desai’s novel and how subtly the novel runs embossing the fantasy and realism within it.   Key words: Magic realism, Kiran Desai, Guava Orchard and Hullabaloo.

Highlights

  • The term magic realism derived from “MagischerRealismus” which is a phrase used by Franz Roh to describe the quasi-surrealistic and work of a group of German painters in the 1920s

  • The literary terminology that has been reflecting in the novel Hullabaloo in the Guava Orchard is

  • Anita Desai, who represents the voice of younger generation of Indian English writers that explores the technique of magic realism in her debut novel Hullabaloo in the Guava Orchard

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Summary

Ritu Sharma

Kiran Desai was born in 1971 and educated in India, England and the United States. She studied creative writing at Columbia University, where she was the recipient of a Woolrich fellowship. Desai is the daughter of Anita Desai, herself short-listed for the booker prize on three occasions She was born in Chandigarh, and spent the early years of her life in Pune and Mumbai. She studied in the Cathedral and John Connon school She left India at 14, and she and her mother lived in England for a year, and moved to the United States, where she studied creative writing at bennington college, hollins university and columbia university.

INTRODUCTION
When he grows up again one night comes where
INCIDENTS WHICH ARE CLOSE TO MAGIC REALISM
CONCLUSION
Full Text
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