Abstract:
Shashi Deshpande is a contemporary Indo-English novelist who has
presented the plight of middle-class Indian women, who are oscillating between
traditional and modern roles. Shashi Deshpande was born in 1938 at Dharwar, a
small town in north Karnataka. She is the daughter of the eminent Sanskrit scholar,
Shriranga. The novelist has studied in Bombay and Bangalore and acquired degrees
in Economics and law, as well as a postgraduate degree in English Literature and a
diploma in Journalism. She is nowsettled in Bangalore along with her husband and
son. Shashi Deshpande started her literary career in the 70's with short stories - her
first story collection The Legacy andOther Stories came out in 1978. She has been
honoured with Sahitya Academy Award in 1990 for her novel That Long Silence.
She has also received Thirumathi Rangamala Prize for her novel Roots and
Shadows. Till date Shashi Deshpande has produced five story collections and eight
novels.
Shashi Deshpande's works are based on purely Indian setting. She has
illustrated the subordinate position of women in the orthodox tradition-bound Indian
society. The novelist has poignantly projected the conventional norms designed by
the patriarchal Indian social system for its women. These existing norms axe the
rights of women and side-line their existence as human beings. The constricting
social factors which are responsible for the suppression and exploitation of women
have been exhibited by the novelist. She has taken up the issues of gender
discrimination and social conditioning of the girl-child, husband-wife relationship :
the aggressor and the suppressed, and the sexual exploitation of women within and
outside the marital frame. Shashi Deshpande has assertively exhibited the plight of
the girl-child who has to endure the trauma of gender-discrimination and social
conditioning and is made to feel inferior to the male progeny since her childhood.
Male child is given preference in the Indian social set-up as they are considered as
the carrier of the family lineage. Social-conditioning restricts the flowering of a
girl's personality as it lays stress on the inculcation of pre-defined feminine traits -
self-abnegation, servility, endurance, patience and forgiveness. Marriage is set as an
ultimate goal for girls. Women have to mould and transform themselves to suit the
interests of their male counterparts and in this process suppress their self-identity.
Shashi Deshpande has also projected the sexual exploitation of women which
lacerates their right towards their own body. She has depicted that women have to
endure the trauma of rape not only in the society but also in the marital life.
Motherhood is often imposed on them. It is not an outcome ofmutual understanding
as the husband-wife relationship is routinely viewed in terms of the master and
slave relationship. It lacks companionship. Hence the novelist has depicted the
possibility of man-woman relationship outside the family frame in all her novels.
According to her a healthy and friendly relationship between man and woman gives
them space to assert their true-selves and also a chance to ameliorate their
weaknesses. Despite it, Shashi Deshpande has no revulsion towards men and
emphasizes nurturing of healthy human relationships. Hence her female
protagonists never negate family bonds.
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Shashi Deshpande advocates emancipation of women by dissolving rigid
doctrines which marginalise them. She believes that economic independence and
legal rights given to women are not enough to liberate women from the rigid
doctrines. A change in the whole social set-up is required. According to her the
emancipation of women does not necessarily negate the possibility of healthy and
happy family life. Thus Shashi Deshpande's feminism suits to the Indian social
milieu. The analysis ofher expository and creative works helps us to understand the
status ofwomen in the contemporary Indian society.