Women's writings break stereotypes: Shashi Deshpande

[email protected] (CD Network)
March 10, 2012
Mangalore, March 10: It was when women started writing, the stereotypes broke as women knew what they were and wrote what she was, said renowned Indo-Anglian Novelist Shashi Deshpande after inaugurating the national seminar “Emerging images of woman in Indian fiction in English and in translations from regional languages,” organised at Besant Women's College in Mangalore on Friday.

It was with women's literature, the truth about the woman was portrayed. This was something that literature lacked earlier. It is not that women have changed, but society that has changed.

Speaking about her mother, she said that her mother saw the maximum change as she saw the 20th as well as the 21st century. In first half of her life, she saw the struggle for freedom and in the second half, she saw urbanisation, nuclear family set-up, better health facilities, globalisation and various other developments.

“My grandfather was very particular about the education of my mother. My mother was highly educated for her time and not married like her peers. This troubled her as she had a desire to marry and take care of a family. However, later in life when she saw ambitious women, she became bitter as she felt she had not achieved anything. She was an intelligent woman caught between the images the society had set for a woman and the real-ambitious self she was,” said Deshpande.

Roles give rise to images and images are nothing but social creations. “I was very disappointed with some of the great writers like Tagore as they defined roles for women. Tagore portrayed women as a caring mother, feeding a man and always taking care of a man. However, I realised that a woman does not change overnight after she becomes a mother. Images are nothing but generalisations,” she said.

“It was my problem with stereotypes that made me a writer. The confusion and turmoil around me made me write,” she said and added that creative literature is a dynamic living thing. “To a writer, each character is a living person. To see all women in a woman is an endeavor for the author within me,” concluded Deshpande.

“At last women have been found worthy of academic analysis. This is the result of the long desired change in social conditions,” said Women's National Education Society Secretary Professor P P Gomathi.

She also asked men to cooperate with women and help her find her place. Man and woman should walk hand in hand and man should give space to woman as his equal, she said.

CIEFL School of Critical Humanities Professor and Coordinator Dr Susie Tharur spoke on how images are created in her key note address. She showed a set of photographs exhibited in an expo re-created by Pushpamala and Claire Arn.

The photographs showed different depictions of women starting from the classic representation of Ravi Varma's Lakshmi. “Ravi Varma defined what an ideal Indian woman was.

He contributed immensely to the pool of imagery,” she said. She later showed photograph of a circus woman, two ladies caught in a theft case and the portrait of Our Lady of Velankanni.

She then questioned the audience if these Indian women fit in the frame work of the ideal Indian woman in their mind.

She also pointed out that every day, when one grooms one self in front of the mirror, she tries to re-create the images the society has set for her. It is basically the composition of images around the person, she said and added that we live in a world totally saturated with images.

Two technical sessions, “Indian women novelists and the construction of women's identity” and “Indian men writing in English and women's issues,” were held. On Saturday, sessions on “The subaltern woman in Indian novels” and “Representing woman in India-Politics, society and writing” will be held.

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News Network
May 12,2020

Shivamogga, May 12: Roopa Praveen Rao, an expectant mother and a nurse at a hospital in Shivamogga's Karnataka, has chosen to continue to serve the patients amid the ongoing COVID-19 crisis.

Rao who hails from Gajanuru village is nine months pregnant and works at Jayachamarajendra Government Hospital as a nurse.

She travels every day to Thirthahalli taluk to attend to the patients at the hospital.

"The taluk hospital is surrounded by many villages, people need our service. My seniors had asked me to take leave but I want to serve people. I work six hours a day," she told news agency.

She added that Chief Minister B S Yediyurappa too called her up and appreciated her dedication and suggested that she should take rest.

Rao is one of the many frontline COVID-19 warriors who have been risking their lives to ensure that everyone stays safe as the country fights the coronavirus.

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News Network
January 15,2020

Hubballi, Jan 15: Leaders of the Muslim community, Dalit organisations, Congress Party, and others are staging a hunger strike at Dr B R Ambedkar Circle in Hubballi, opposing the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA) and National Register of Citizens (NRC).

Raising slogans against Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Union Home Minister Amit Shah, they demanded the withdrawal of the CAA and not to implement NRC.

"India is witnessing such a dictatorship for the first time. The BJP government is trying to divide people into the lines of religion, through CAA and NRC. This move is a threat for peace and harmony in the country," said AICC member Shakir Sanadi, who led the protest.

Sayed Tajuddin Quadri, Moulana Niyaz Alam, Moulana Nayimuddin and others took part in the hunger strike.

Former minister A M Hindasgeri, former MP I G Sanadi, F H Jakkappanavar, Pitambrappa Bilar, and others also extended support to the protest.

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News Network
February 10,2020

Mangaluru, Feb 10: Life of a 40–year-old man, who suffered a massive cardiac arrest, was saved by an ambulance driver who covered 80-km distance between Dharmasthala and Mangaluru in just 40 minutes.

The patient, a Chikkaballapur native sustained a heart attack near Sakleshpur on Saturday while he was on his way to Dharmasthala. He was provided preliminary treatment at a private hospital in Ujire, where doctors advised his relatives to shift him to a hospital in Mangaluru immediately.

The patient’s condition was critical and the odds were completely against him. Moreover owing to the ongoing double lane project work, the road too had been dugout. Despite all this, ambulance driver Hameed drove at a fast pace and managed to take the patient to the hospital within 40 minutes.

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