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This thesis explores and interprets the presence and significance of myths in
the novels of Bharati Mukherjee. J. Chiari claims that science, philosophy, and the
arts; all the audio, video, and printed versions, are various, complementary aspects of
the human approach to truth. The pedagogical function of myths, as stated by the
mythologist Joseph Campbell, serves as the yardstick to analyse the significance of
myths in the lives of Mukherjee's protagonists: Tara Banerjee (The Tiger's
Daughter), Dimple (Wife), Jasmine (Jasmine), Hannah Easton (The Holder of the
World), Devi (Leave It to Me), Tara Bhattacharjee (Desirable Daughters), and Tara
Lata (The Tree Bride).
Myths are the containers of universal experiences, which engage across
generations, and to whichevery individual can turn to discover a replica or reflection
of his/her experiences. And literature, being both realistic and imaginative depiction
of life, bears indelible marks of mythical contents in it. Bharati Mukherjee's novels
are literary records of seven women of different backgrounds, out there on their
adventures towards a new, self-defined identity. Each one of them takes up an inner
or outer or both type of journey in the direction of their growth, transformation, and
contentment. This study analyses these narratives from the perspective of the explicit
or implied myths in them; it shows how mythic references define and explain the line
of thought in Mukherjee's heroines, their fluctuating sensibility, their decisions, and
also some crucial turns of events. It clarifies that the guidance and inspiration they
draw from mythic tales alleviates their self-doubt and enables them to go ahead with
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confidence. Bharati Mukherjee has adopted directly from Hindu myths with religious
and spiritual undertones; the tales related to Sita, the wife of Lord Rama in the
Ramayana, and the myth of Devi, the mother goddess in her various forms like Kali,
Mansa, Durga, play a vital role in Wife, Jasmine, Leave It to Me, and Desirable
Daughters. Certain archetypes embodied in myths get reflected in all of her
narratives. By setting an analogy between the circumstances in her protagonists'
lives and these archetypes, I have tried to show that mythic contents in Mukherjee's
novels serve as the vehicles of meaning in the narrative, providing insights into the
protagonists' psyche and a window to the fuller understanding of certain crucial
situations in the novels.
The central part of the study is the application of the hero-archetype of
Campbell's 'monomyth' to the dynamics of the transformative life-journeys of
Mukherjee's protagonists. Maureen Mukrdock's hero-journey pattern for women has
also been taken in account to make the analysis balanced. The discussion proceeds
by setting Mukherjee's heroines against these twin models, displaying that during the
perilous journey of self-exploration, Mukherjee's protagonists undergo a
metamorphosis which takes its toll on the weak and undetermined while rewarding
the persistent and flexible ones. By applying the hero-journey pattern to the modern
context of the life-journey of these females, it becomes easier and clearer to
understand and measure their failures and accomplishments. The models serve as a
touchstone for the examination of the process of self-discovery of Mukherjee's
protagonists as well as of any individual in general.
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Besides being females, Bharati Mukherjee's protagonists are immigrants as
well, except Tara Lata in The Tree Bride. That makes for an intriguing study of these
immigrants women in the light of the myth of American Dream. This myth of
immense possibilities of an ideal existence is traditionally associated with
immigrants to the USA. However, a comprehensive view of the phenomenon of
immigration; the expectations and aspirations of immigrants, their bitter-sweet
experiences of adjustment and establishment, and their hard-earned fulfilment in life,
serves in universalizing the myth of American Dream. Although the fulfilment of
this archetypal Dream still requires being 'American'; fitting, more or less, to the
archetype of the American Adam, an embodiment of American character, the term
'American' is viewed in this study as a universal archetype, which bears no mark of
a definite nationality. Bharati Mukherjee's protagonists move from one place to the
other, dreaming of the greener pastures that shall enable them to get past the inner or
outer inhibitions and restrictions, and be the master of their life. In the pursuit of this
Dream, they get into touch with the core of their personality and get a clear
perception of the scope of availing the resources to experience their full potential.
Depending upon the extent of their forbearance in the face of challenges on the way,
they either meet failure or emerge out successfully.
The study encompasses the analysis of all possible mythic aspects of Bharati
Mukherjee's novels and concludes on the note that myths serve as the anchors of the
life-journeys of her heroines. She is in line with other major Asian American women
writers like Maxine Hong Kingston and Hiromi Goto, who make myths the vehicle
of meanings in their works. When investigated from Campbell's point of view,
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which is the outcome of his study and inspiration from the psychologist Carl Gustav
Jung, mythologist Heinrich Zimmer, anthropologist James C. Frazer etc., myths truly
provide guidelines for Mukherjee's protagonists. It also facilitates the reader to
evaluate the lives of these fictitious women as well as his/her own life in terms of its
mythic significance, and get into touch with his/her self and with the global human
fraternity. |
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