Monday, April 2, 2012

Paper No. E-C-401 Character analysis of Mr Biswas and Mrs Tulsis


E-C-401: New Literature

Hitesh S. Vaghani
Roll no. - 19
SEM - IV
Paper no. – E-C-401
Year – 2011-12
Topic: Character analysis of Mr Biswas and Mrs Tulsis
 








Submitted to Dr.Dilip Barad
Department of English,
Bhavnagar University.

Mr Biswas:-
Mohan Biswas is a person who is subject to misfortune, as the ill omens present at his birth suggest. He is marked, however, by his continual resilience and optimism. Despite his feeling of being trapped by the Tulsis, he fights to maintain his independence and romance. A sense of despair and disillusionment troubles him later in life, but he fights against that too, and retains faith in the future both though his children and though achieving the statue of a house owner. At Hanuman House the conducts his campaign against the Tulsis with humour and inventiveness which show his wit and sense of absurdity. He invents a catalogue of animal names for the family, such as ‘the old hen’ for Mrs Tulsi, and mocks them for their strong and exclusive family loyalties and mixed religious affinities. At times his actions can seem petty and spiteful, and yet Naipaul succeeds in retaining our respect and liking for him as a character. It is worth thinking about how Naipaul achieves this difficult balance. Part of the answer is that Mr Biswas is able to make fun of himself as well as of other people, and so avoids becoming too superior and smug. He acts the role of clown or buffoon frequently and even mocks his own appearance. In a scene at The Chase, he reflects how he does not feel like a small man, and yet the clothes hanging up were unmistakably those of ‘a small man, comic, make-believe clothes’. A sense of insecurity also remains with him, so that he never feels periods of good fortune can be permanent, or believes in them fully. The efforts to achieve the ownership of his house, reflected in the very title of the novel, thus become a need to establish a firm reality and independence of his own. The creativity shown in his painting and writing reflects this need further, as does his reading of fiction and philosophy. He needs to believe in the possibility of romance, and much of his frustration in the novel stems from the feeling that romance is always eluding him, especially after he become involved with the Tulsis.
            This involvement reveals another major theme of the novel: that of the complex relationship between freedom and commitment. Freedom is shown as something which is desired, but feared at the same time, as it can cause feelings of emptiness and of not belonging or being necessary to another person or to society as a whole. These feelings are frequently at war in Mr Biswas, and this conflict is shown in his changing attitudes to Hanuman House. Although he quickly rebels against its attempt to destroy his individuality by making him conform to the established rules and codes of behaviour, he also welcomes the feeling of security and orderliness which it offers. Here he is no longer simply a nonentity, but has a recognised role, even if it often seems a negative one. He himself feels on occasion that his campaign is pointless and degrading, and that his presence in the household is basically irrelevant since if he left, the family rituals would continue as before.
            It is at this point, at the end of Part 1, that he recognises that rebellion to be constructive must be accompanied by the positive act of constructing a better alternative, and he leaves for the city with this intention. The process of building a separate identity and accepting the results of one’s past actions and involvements is shown to be a painful and difficult process. Ti involves the shedding of fantasies and illusion we all possess, symbolised for Mr Biswas in his ‘Escape’ stories which he eventually destroys, and accepting the reality and commitments which have gradually accumulated almost without his being aware of it. The novel is thus partly about growing up, and attaining maturity and a sense of responsibility.
            A similar ambivalence is shown in Mr Biswas’s religious views. Although he claims to rejects any traditional Hindu attitudes, such as the rigid caste system, he enjoys his Brahmin status when at Tara’s and Ramchand’s homes, and possesses a certain fastidiousness about  foods and smells- he refuses to stock salt beef and lard in his shop at That Chase, and in moments so fear and stress he chants Hindu phrases. He also receives a traditional Hindu cremation. Naipaul is showing us here the complex relationship that exists between the forces that shape an individual and his attempts to form his own personality and beliefs.
            Mr Biswas displays also a certain naivety or innocence in the judgements he forms of other people. It seems that he can be easily misled by people who can take advantage of his fears and ambitions. This deception happens with Moti and the lawyer Seebaran at The Chase; with the carpenter, Maclean, at Green Vale; and with the solicitor’s clerk. At Hanuman House also he is deceived into thinking that he is marrying into a wealthy family and will receive a large dowry, but this hope proves hollow. A further concept that Naipaul is illustrating in the novel is the difference that can exist between appearance and reality, and this contrast is often a source of humour. The walls of Hanuman House appear to be concrete, but are in fact, as Mrs Tulsi proudly tells him, made of clay bricks. This disparity is shown most clearly in the house in Sikkim Street which again looks deceptively solid and deceives Mr Biswas, and then, comically, the Tutties.
            Mr Biswas himself is not all that he appears to be. As he says sadly to Shama: ‘That is the whole blasted trouble. I don’t look like anything at all. Shopkeeper, lawyer, doctor, labourer, and overseer- I don’t look like any of them.’ As one of the Tulsi sons-in –law and as a journalist he can achieve a kind of status, but has always to return to his ‘crowded, shabby room’. During his job as investigator of Deserving Destitute, he reflects that the conditions he is living in are as bad as the people about whom he is writing. This element of vulnerability and luck of certainty help to make Mr Biswas into a human and sympathetic person, as well as a kind of Everyman with whom we can identify. This also explains his words to his son during his breakdown at Green Vale when Anand asks him in a bewildered way ‘Who are you?’ Mr Biswas replies: ‘I am just somebody. Nobody at all. I am just a man you know.’ Thus he resents, as we all do, the attempts of other people to categorise him and so reduce his individuality. He even alters his daughter’s birth certificate where he is described by Seth as a labourer, and signs himself ‘proprietor’.
            His attempts at self-definition, then, constitute the main body of the novel. By finally owning his own house away from the Tulsis, who are described at the end of the prologue as ‘that large, disintegrating and indiffent family’, he has succeeded in laying claim to his portion of the earth and escaped the fate of having ‘lived and died as one had been born, unnecessary and unaccommodated.’
Mrs Tulsi:-
Mrs Tulsi is the centre of the Tulsi family around which the other characters revolve. She is the widow of Pundit Tulsi, a respected figure both in his native India and in Trinidad, and the whole family again prestige from his reputation. Mrs Tulsi maintains a matriarchal tyranny over the household and its various members. It is significant that in Hanuman House, the usual Hindu tradition by which daughters go to live with their husbands and become almost servants of their mother-in law is reversed, in that the husbands stay in that the husbands stay in the daughters’ household and become subservient to their mother-in law, Mrs Tulsi. This is part of the humiliation which Mr Biswas feels so strongly and tries to reject. The manipulation which Mrs Tulsi directs towards those around her is clearly concealed under an appearance of martyrdom and suffering. If someone steps out of line, she faints and retires to the Rose Room where she is endlessly massaged by the faithful Sushila and other daughters, and remains there until the offending son-in-law, who encounters silence and hostility on all sides, is forced to capitulate and apologise to her.
            Mr Biswas is on many occasions subject to the whims and emotional blackmail of the ‘old fox’. She is able to control her moods according to the occasion, to become maudlin and sentimental to disarm her opponent. This is shown when she tries to win Mr Biswas back to family allegiance after the birth of Savi, whom he wishes to name Lakshmi. She makes a number of simple statements which strike Mr Biswas as possessing a ‘puzzling profundity’, and he finds himself listening against his will and being ‘trapped’ by her mood. She is proud of her authority and her ‘old-fashionedness’, and the floggings she has administered to her command of English. When Mr Biswas offends against the Tulsi demand for the suppression of individuality by buying the large doll’s house for Savi, Mrs Tulsi declares that she is poor and gives to all but cannot ‘compete with Santa Claus’ and she asks Shama to give her notice before moving to ‘her mansion’. Like her brother-in –law Seth, who rules with her, she is capable of surprising crudity in her language as when she tells Mr Biswas to ‘go to hell’ during their final quarrel.
            The novel shows the decline of the Tulsi family which is caused by internal wrangles and the disruptive effects of a different culture. Mrs Tulsi is anxious for her sons to succeed and sends them to a Roman Catholic collage, thus compromising her Hindu beliefs- as Mr Biswas is quick to point out with his image of her as ‘the orthodox Roman Catholic Hindu’ who has salmon only on Good Friday. Mrs Tulsi moves to Port of Spain when she feels that the ‘younger god’ Owad should be looked after during his schooling following his brother’s marriage. It is at this point that the power structure in Hanuman House begins to be threatened, since Seth, though he can maintain control, fails to impose harmony. The family feud with Seth furthers the declaim of the household, and when Owad  is sent abroad to study to become a doctor, Mrs Tulsi appears to lose interest in the family and ceases to direct it until she is revived by the move to short hills. Here again, however, her interest soon languishes, though she issues some directives about food and possible economies. We are told that, after the death of Mrs Tulsi’s sister, Padma, the ‘virtue’ of the family dissolves, and Mrs Tulsi assumes more and more the role of an invalid. She is still able to exert control over her daughters, and on her move to the city from short hills, succeeds in making their lives a misery as she develops her command ‘of invective and obscenity’. She is revived by the return of Owad, and exerts herself to please him while her health improves ‘spectacularly’ under his treatment, thus betraying, thus betraying her obvious hypochondria. After Owad is alienated by the quarrel with Anand and his increasing association with his own friends and Dorothy’s cousin, she tries in vain to win him back by talking about his boyhood and Pundit Tulsi and her own sufferings; but it is now too late. She is a character for whom the reader feels little sympathy, but she is a source of much humour and satire in the novel, as well as showing the decline of traditions through her failure to maintain them. We also see, though her involvement with Roman Catholicism, the dilution of Hindu culture and religious ritual.

           

3 comments:

  1. Whith the help of characters you have also try to explain the theme of the novel it is the good point of your assignment. keep it up..............

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  2. Hello Hitesh,

    Characters are indeed the mouthpiece of the author in the novel. In the novel, do you think that the grief and diasporic sensibility of the character and the theme of colonized and opperasor are represented by these two characters?

    On the whole nice attempt. Keep it up!!!

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  3. It tremendously help me, so Many Many thakle you

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