Reconciling Cultural Dilemmas Depicted in Kiran Desai's The Inheritance of Loss

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IOSR Journal Of Humanities And Social Science (IOSR-JHSS)

Volume 20, Issue 3, Ver. VII (Mar. 2015), PP 65-67


e-ISSN: 2279-0837, p-ISSN: 2279-0845.
www.iosrjournals.org

Reconciling Cultural Dilemmas Depicted in Kiran Desais the


Inheritance of Loss
Ms. K. Kavitharaj1, Dr. V Umadevi2,
Assistant Professor, Sri Krishna College of Technology
Assistant Professor, Government Arts College, Coimbatore

Abstract: Cultural dilemmas seem to be everywhere as the world had become a global village due to
communication and technological developments and so people come across people of diverse culture, tradition
and practice. To be competent and successful in the present business world of electronic communication,
transaction, transportation, banking, commerce etc, it becomes a necessity to identify, analyse and reconcile the
cultural dilemmas by realizing the cultural adaptive solutions. It also becomes vital to respect the cultural
differences as it also involves creating new ways to resolve cultural dilemmas in order to be transculturally
competent with the diverse global community. These cultural dilemmas and its differences are depicted in Kiran
Desais The Inheritance of Loss through the character Jemubhai Patel, the embittered retired judge living in a
crumbled house. The novel is the remembrance of Jemubhai Patels journeys, arrivals and departures which
brings forth Jemubhai Patels cultural dilemmas whether to inherit the Indianess or to follow the western ideals.
It highlights the bitter experience a man face for his transition to a different culture and the need of the hour is
to overcome those differences.

I.

Introduction

Indian English writing has been acknowledged all over the world as the Indian writers have created
their new paths and got rewards for their works in English and also the Indo-English fiction has undergone a
complete transformation from its traditional norms which involved itself with the history of India into the
expectation of international readers. As a result there were eminent writers projecting their creative talents both
during the Pre Independence and Post Independence period. In the late twentieth century writers like Arunthathi
Roy, Salman Rushdie and writers of Indian origin are recognized globally who compete the native writers and
have received the prestigious awards for Literature. The one who had also enlisted her name in this criteria is
Kiran Desai.
Kiran Desai, a promising Indian writer in English born in 1971 and educated in India, England and US
is the daughter of the eminent novelist, Anita Desai. She left India when she was fifteen, lived in England a year
and has been in the US since then. She has got her masters degree in Writing in Columbia University. Desai has
written two novels Hullaballoo in the Guava Orchard and The Inheritance of Loss. Her first novel Hullaballoo in
the Guava Orchard was written in the year 1998 and was remarked by Salman Rushdie as lush and intensely
imagined. The Times has also commented that Kiran Desai is the most appealing voice of the new generation
and also her book is fresh, funny and delicious which defies comparison with that of any other novelist. The
novel has won her the Betty Trask Award, the prize given by the by the Society of Authors for the best new
novels by the Citizens of the Commonwealth of Nations. The novel was also serialized in the New Yorker,
included in the Vantage book of Indian Writing and has found publishers all over the world. Hullaballoo in the
Guava Orchard is a smartly written fascinating tale of love, faith and family relationship which is both comical
and satirical. Desais second novel The Inheritance of Loss won the Britains Man Booker Prize, as a careerstirring achievement as a budding novelist, especially it is an honour that has eluded her mother, Anita Desai,
who has been a finalist three times for the prize. The novel was also short listed for the Orange Broadband Prize
for fiction in 2007.
Kiran Desais second novel, The Inheritance of Loss which leaped the author into fame deals with the
social, political and economic problem of the people in India and the social and psychological problems faced
by Indian immigrants in America and England. With her deep analytical insight, Desai depicts the existing
social and political issues through her characters. The novel also highlights the prevailing and common issues
such as globalization, economic inequality, social discrimination and political violence. Desais personal
experience of multiculturalism and dislocation has found a definite shape in her novels through situation in
which her characters find themselves rootless and lead a meaningless life of loneliness. The novel is set in
Kalimpong, the North-Eastern part of India during the time of India-Nepalese insurgency in the year 1986,
where the place was shackled by many strikes, communal riots and disharmony. It is the story of an embittered
judge who lives in a crumbling house, his situation and that of Biju, the immigrant who suffers in America. It is
DOI: 10.9790/0837-20376567

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Reconciling Cultural dilemmas depicted in Kiran Desais The Inheritance of Loss


about his loss of life in isolation and desperation in England and his inhuman behavior towards others. It also
brings forth being educated alone does not mean to be a civilized person. It also predicts the immigrant issues
through Biju. As the title of the novel depicts, the characters mainly inherits loss and they are a total loss
themselves as they are negligible in the world.
Misconception, the root of cultural dilemmas
Jemubhai Patel, the retired chief justice is different and unusual from that of others. His granddaughter
comments oh grandfather more lizard than human(32) and that he had fixed gaze, lack of movements and also
a person travelled forward but far back. He is close and reactive only to his pet and not to any of the human
beings, not even to his granddaughter, Sai. Jemubhais remembrance of his past makes him feel mysterious and
every bit of him is filled with burning sensation. Jemubhai was born to a family of the peasant caste in Piphit.
To make his fathers dream come true, Jemubhai was sent to England at the age of twenty to pursue his studies
where he was surprised to see that people there could be poor and live an unaesthetic lives because he expected
only grandness in England. This is an evident for the misconception that one imbibes on other nation and its
culture. It is stated by Ajith Kumar that The Inheritance of Loss highlights the differences between east and
west and the evils of globalization. Globalisation instead of unifying the world, raises the binaries between Esat
and West
The cause of cultural dilemmas
One of the causes for the cultural dilemmas is the misconception that a person has about other peoples
culture, tradition and practices. Other reason could be his inability to recognize, realize and reconcile with the
cultural differences, so that he would be efficient and well prepared to face anybody and any situation of any
cultural background. This situation is evident with the character of Jemubhai and the cultural dilemmas he had
undergone in England. Jemubhai was basically not a sentimental and emotional person. He never cried or
bothered for his family when he left Piphit for England. Instead he was unhappy for the packed food sent by his
mother and he threw it over board as he thought that it is undignified love, Indian love, stinking unaesthetic
love(38). In England, Jemubhai studied restless working for 12 hours at a stretch and late into the night with
the only skill that he had carried from India. Consequently, he drew himself from other things and failed to
make a courageous gesture. The author narrates He retreated into a solitude that grew in weight day by day.
The solitude became a habit, the habit became the man, and it crushed him into shadow (39)
The effect of cultural dilemmas
As a result of Jemubhais cultural dilemmas and his own inefficiency, he attempted to hide himself and
so for the entire day nobody spoke to him at all. His throat jammed without uttering words and his heart and
mind turned into a aching things. Jemubhai forgot how to laugh and if he ever did, he closed his mouth with his
hand because he could not bear anyone to see his gums, his teeth. For fear of offence, he would not peep himself
out of his clothes and washed obsessively, concerned he would be accused of smelling. To the core, Jemubhai
would be never seen without his shoes and socks. Thus it is obvious that Jemubhai preferred shadow to light,
faded days to sunny, for he was suspicious that sunlight might reveal him, in his hideousness, all too clearly
(40)Jemubhai was not bothered of anything including the beauty of nature of the country side. As days went on
he felt barely human at all and finally he dissolved himself into self pity as he had learned to take refuge in the
third person and to keep everyone at bay, to keep even himself away from himself like the Queen(111). In
JemubhaisICS probation finals, he was unable to answer a very simple questions like how a steam train work as
he was least bothered about the fascinating field of his time and was buried in his recommended subjects. As a
whole his mind was completely blank. In a foreign nation, Jemubhai bothered not only the behavior of the
people, he find it difficult to match with them in any ways due to his self pity. Hence Jemubhai with all his
cultural dilemmas had understood the cultural difference in a wrung way.
The impacts of the misconceptions
When Jemubhai returned to India as a person enrolled in covenant service, he eventually took revenge
on his early confusions and embarrassments. He was after something called keeping up standard which are
standards to his own accumulations. He thought that he was mistaken for something he was not and ultimately
he was a man of dignity. Naturally he had the inhibition to envy the English and to loath Indians. So when he
returned to India, Jemubhai behaved a stranger to his relatives and neighbours who boasted for his success. On
the other hand Jemubhai was a foreigner to his own land and had developed his own ideas of privacy. With all
his so called standard ideas Jemubhai considered his wife as an illiterate village girl. He never entertain her
company and taught her the same lesson of loneliness and shame he had learned himself. Later he abandoned his
wife and his child.

DOI: 10.9790/0837-20376567

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Reconciling Cultural dilemmas depicted in Kiran Desais The Inheritance of Loss


II.

Conclusion

Towards the end of the novel Jemubhai realized that in all his life he had run after meaningless things
like position and power. He had never lived a responsible and sensible life which was of no use to anybody. He
realized that his position of power had gone frittered away in years of misanthropy and cynicism. He
remembered how he had abandoned his family; his fathers love, hope and strength and how he had ill-treated
his wife and collapsed his relatives thought that he would help them. Thus Jemubhai overcomes the cultural
dilemmas that he had imbibed, he becomes reasonable and of all he becomes a human. It is obvious that man
faces cultural dilemmas which could be rectified by overcoming those dilemmas and it could be possible only
by recognizing and respecting the cultural differences. This becomes possible if those differences should be
considered for its best part and the best solution to reconcile with the cultural dilemmas is to sustain the ever
universal humanity and a persons individuality. As it is commented by Sanjay Solanki the immediate concern
of Desai seem to be this confluence of the past and the present which is full of loss, longing, distortion, healing
and hope of a better tomorrow(81), the novel ends with a solution for the better understanding of cultural
differences.

Works cited
[1].
[2].
[3].
[4].

Desai, Kiran. The Inheritance of Loss, New Delhi: Penguin Books, 2006.
Das Sonali, Kiran Desais The Inheritance of Loss: A Study in Humanism in The Critical Endeavour. Vol VII, Dec 2006.
Solanki Sanjay, Past, Present and Future in The Inheritance of Loss in The Atlantic Literary Review, Vol 8 No 2, April-June,
2006.
Ashroft, Bill. Griffiths, Gareth. Tiffinn, Helen. Eds., The Post-colonial Studies Reader, 2 nd ed. London and New York: Routledge,
1995.

DOI: 10.9790/0837-20376567

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