Bartered  Lives

£4.99

Bartered Lives

Love and Betrayal in North India

Modern and contemporary fiction: general and literary Adventure / action fiction Dating, relationships, living together and marriage: advice and issues

Author: Joyshri Lobo

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Language: English

Published by: Partridge Publishing India

Published on: 8th July 2014

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 333 Kb

ISBN: 9781482834642


Overview

"Bartered Lives" is the tale of two married couples from different economic, religious, and social strata. Their relationships, based on mutual trust and love, break the barriers laid down by caste and community. Though their paths keep crossing, all have to face huge challenges and moments of extreme conflict due to the independent choices they make.

Themes and Setting

The story juxtaposes once-tolerant Hindus against Muslims and other minorities, encouraged by ruthless politicians. The vacuum created by indifferent governance is filled by the slum lord, "Commando", who creates his own rules of reward and punishment. He is a self-made man, charismatic, often crude and vulgar, generous, helpful, brutal, and very wealthy. He pays no taxes but governs the Basti with an iron fist.

Characters

In particular, it is the story of Shaku, a teacher from a rich Brahmin home, who employs Durgi and her daughter Gulabo, both from the lower castes, as servants. Their large family has to seek ethically variant ways of earning to keep their stomachs full. Their actions clash with the very conservative rules set by the higher classes. Shaku understands this and tries to share her privileges with Durgi's family.

Plot Points

Her journey into Afghanistan to educate her cousin-in-law Aziza is catastrophic. One of India’s dream projects to help the very poor, the Aanganwadi, is described in realistic detail as an example of the state’s failure and apathy. The narrative explores differences between education provided for well-to-do children in private schools as compared to those from the slums.

Social Commentary

This is a portrait of twenty-first-century India, whose youth are educated but have no jobs, whose government creates food programmes but is defeated by its own corruption and selfishness. It is the tale of many who seek a place in the sun but cannot due to paucity of funds, space, and jobs. And yet, through it all, India smiles and is hospitable to a fault!

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