Why should you read "The God of Small Things" by Arundhati Roy? - Laura Wright
-
0:07 - 0:11“A few dozen hours can affect the
outcome of whole lifetimes/ -
0:11 - 0:14And that when they do,
those few dozen hours, -
0:14 - 0:17like the salvaged remains
of a burned clock… -
0:17 - 0:22must be resurrected from the ruins
and examined.” -
0:22 - 0:27This is the premise of Arundati Roy’s 1997
novel "The God of Small Things." -
0:27 - 0:31Set in a town in Kerala, India called
Ayemenem, -
0:31 - 0:35the story revolves around fraternal
twins Rahel and Estha, -
0:35 - 0:39who are separated for 23 years
after the fateful few dozen hours -
0:39 - 0:43in which their cousin drowns, their
mother’s illicit affair is revealed, -
0:43 - 0:46and her lover is murdered.
-
0:46 - 0:49While the book is set at the point of
Rahel and Estha’s reunion, -
0:49 - 0:53the narrative takes place mostly in
the past, reconstructing the details -
0:53 - 0:57around the tragic events that
led to their separation. -
0:57 - 0:59Roy’s rich language and masterful
storytelling -
0:59 - 1:04earned her the prestigious Booker prize
for "The God of Small Things." -
1:04 - 1:07In the novel, she interrogates the culture
of her native India, -
1:07 - 1:10including its social mores
and colonial history. -
1:10 - 1:12One of her focuses is the caste system,
-
1:12 - 1:16a way of classifying people by hereditary
social class -
1:16 - 1:18that is thousands of years old.
-
1:18 - 1:20By the mid-20th century,
-
1:20 - 1:24the original four castes associated
with specific occupations -
1:24 - 1:27had been divided into
some 3000 sub-castes. -
1:27 - 1:31Though the caste system was
Constitutionally abolished in 1950, -
1:31 - 1:34it continued to shape
social life in India, -
1:34 - 1:38routinely marginalizing people
of lower castes. -
1:38 - 1:41In the novel, Rahel and Estha have a
close relationship with Velutha, -
1:41 - 1:44a worker in their family’s pickle factory
-
1:44 - 1:47and member of the so-called
“untouchable” caste. -
1:47 - 1:51When Velutha and the twins’ mother, Ammu,
embark on an affair, -
1:51 - 1:54they violate what Roy describes as the
“love laws” -
1:54 - 1:57forbidding intimacy between
different castes. -
1:57 - 2:01Roy warns that the tragic consequences
of their relationship -
2:01 - 2:06“would lurk forever in ordinary things,”
like “coat hangers,” “the tar on roads,” -
2:06 - 2:09and “the absence of words.”
-
2:09 - 2:13Roy’s writing makes constant use of these
ordinary things, -
2:13 - 2:17bringing lush detail to even the most
tragic moments. -
2:17 - 2:21The book opens at the funeral of the
twins’ half-British cousin Sophie -
2:21 - 2:23after her drowning.
-
2:23 - 2:28As the family mourns, lilies curl and
crisp in the hot church. -
2:28 - 2:31A baby bat crawls up a funeral sari.
-
2:31 - 2:35Tears drip from a chin like
raindrops from a roof. -
2:35 - 2:38The novel forays into the past to explore
the characters’ struggles -
2:38 - 2:42to operate in a world
where they don’t quite fit, -
2:42 - 2:45alongside their nation’s
political turmoil. -
2:45 - 2:48Ammu struggles not to lash out at her
beloved children -
2:48 - 2:52when she feels particularly trapped in her
parents’ small-town home, -
2:52 - 2:56where neighbors judge and shun her
for being divorced. -
2:56 - 3:00Velutha, meanwhile, balances his affair
with Ammu and friendship with the twins -
3:00 - 3:03not only with his employment
to their family, -
3:03 - 3:06but also with his membership to a
budding communist countermovement -
3:06 - 3:10to Indira Ghandi’s “Green Revolution.”
-
3:10 - 3:14In the 1960s, the misleadingly named
“Green Revolution” -
3:14 - 3:17introduced chemical fertilizers
and pesticides -
3:17 - 3:19and the damming of rivers to India.
-
3:19 - 3:23While these policies produced high-yield
crops that staved off famine, -
3:23 - 3:26they also forced people from lower castes
off their land -
3:26 - 3:30and caused widespread
environmental damage. -
3:30 - 3:32When the twins return to Ayemenem
as adults, -
3:32 - 3:36the consequences of the Green Revolution
are all around them. -
3:36 - 3:39The river that was bursting with life
in their childhood -
3:39 - 3:44greets them “with a ghastly skull’s smile,
with holes where teeth had been, -
3:44 - 3:48and a limp hand raised
from a hospital bed.” -
3:48 - 3:51As Roy probes the depths of human
experience, -
3:51 - 3:54she never loses sight of the way her
characters are shaped -
3:54 - 3:56by the time and the place where they live.
-
3:56 - 3:59In the world of "The God of Small Things,"
-
3:59 - 4:02“Various kinds of despair competed
for primacy… -
4:02 - 4:05personal despair could never be
desperate enough... -
4:05 - 4:11personal turmoil dropped by at the wayside
shrine of the vast, violent, circling, -
4:11 - 4:17driving, ridiculous, insane, unfeasible
public turmoil of a nation.”
- Title:
- Why should you read "The God of Small Things" by Arundhati Roy? - Laura Wright
- Speaker:
- Laura Wright
- Description:
-
God of Small Things
- Video Language:
- English
- Team:
closed TED
- Project:
- TED-Ed
- Duration:
- 04:19
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Tara Ahmadinejad edited English subtitles for Why should you read "The God of Small Things" by Arundhati Roy? |