Abstract

Anita Desai's Clear Light of Day (1980) is a partition novel which depicts the influence of the Partition between India and Pakistan on the unity of the Indian family. In 1947, India witnessed a civil war which led to partitioning it into two countries along religious lines. These events coincided with the end of the British rule in India. As a result of that, the Indian individual started questioning his real identity. During the period (1947-1970), India witnessed dramatic social, political, economic changes and transformations In her sixth novel Clear Light of Day, Anita Desai studies the impact of the Partition on the country and on the personal lives of the Indian individuals. The novel is precisely a depiction of family disintegration which parallels the disintegration of India under the Partition circumstances. The aim of the study is to investigate the influence of the Partition on the Indian families which survive the civil wars between the Hindus and the Muslims. Also the study tackles the role of women in the Indian society and the influence of the western principles on them.

Highlights

  • Desai's Clear Light of Day is categorized within the Partition fiction (Osman 15)

  • The novel revolves around Raja's brotherly relationship with his two sisters Bimla and tension between Bim and Raja: She (Tara), and his rich Muslim neighbor and landlord, Hyder Ali

  • The novel is "a memory within a memory," which takes the reader into India in the Partition period depicted in Tara and Bimla's memories when they were children and adults

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Summary

Introduction

Desai's Clear Light of Day is categorized within the Partition fiction (Osman 15). Partition fiction is a kind of fiction which is associated with the Partition events. The antagonism between the two siblings increases after the death of Hyder Ali. Raja sends a letter to Bim saying that she can stay in the house as long as she pays the rent that the family always paid.

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