Monday, January 30, 2017

"Untouchable" Questions 2

Questions

1. Is there any significance of things being ochre colored?
2. Why do they never give Ram Charan's sister a name? The author only refers to her as Ram Charan's sister.
3. When Bakha's father tells him the story of him almost dying, this brings Bahka closer to his father and expresses a totally different side of Lakha as a caring father.  Does this expression by Lakha help Bakha cope with his distress about the upper caste or drive him further into his feelings of isolation?


word: defiled

Thursday, January 26, 2017

“Untouchable” Questions



1. The caste system in India is very strict as seen in the book. Why then are the children of a very high ranking man able to be bribed to teach Bakha who is in the opinion of their caste, untouchable?

2. Sohini's experience at the well is confrontation with someone from her own rank. Another untouchable verbally abuses her and is very mean and gets very angry when she is given water first. Why does the author include this abuse from another untouchable when he includes all the abuse from the caste people?

3. Bakha’s mother has died from cleaning the human and animal refuse. Bakha claims he cannot find sadness in himself over her death. His father Lahka is a very lazy, mean man. To what extent has Bakha’s family life affected him and his hopes for an educated, British-like future? 



Word: caste

Sunday, January 22, 2017

"A Temporary Matter"


     In the short story, A Temporary Matter, Jhumpa Lahiri tells the story of husband and wife Shoba and Shukumar. The tone of this story is sad and dark. This is enhanced in the story by the power outages each day. The couple receives a notice that there will be times with no electricity. This dark setting is the backdrop for a dark story that ends sadly. The sad tone is seen in the diction, imagery, and details of the story. 
     Lahiri uses words with negative connotation such as "hauted" to describe how Shoba feels when she walks in to the room that would have been for the baby. Also, she refers to Shoba's face as "contorted" when she and Shukumar are talking about her moving out. These negative sounding words contribute to the sad tone. Lahiri also uses imagery in this short story When Shukumar describes the boy baby that dies, he refers to it's red skin and this makes Shoba even more grief stricken over the loss of the baby and contributes to their becoming more separated. The author also focuses a lot on the details of this couples life after their baby's death which are monotonous and contribute to the depressing nature of the story and the sad, dark tone.
     The tone contributes to the themes of the story. The author talks a lot about the death of the baby and how it affects Shoba and Shukumar. Their grief over the loss of their baby and their struggle to stay together afterwards is a theme of the story. At the end, Shoba says she is going to move out which is not necessarily "a temporary matter". This sad ending is reinforced by the sad tone throughout the story and the message that grief and loss divides people.