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Friday, 18 September 2020

Analysis of ENGLISH, AUGUST: An Indian Story by Upamanyu Chatterjee Part -2

    In the second half of the novel, Agastya returns to his uncle’s home in Delhi for a Diwali break.  Here also the narrator cites examples to show the misuse of power by civil servants. He travels with Kumar in first class. Later, Kumar refuses to accept train ticket charge-450 rupees-and receives a hundred rupees from Agastya as token of friendship. Agastya guesses that Kumar might have assigned a police menial to buy train tickets for them and doesn’t pay him. Perhaps, police man may get the reward as promotion. They catch a taxi from Delhi railway station and quarrels with a taxi driver over fifty rupees. Kumar misuses his power and threatens the driver. But the driver drives off abusing thus “Tell him to get his arse-hole stitched with the fifty rupees”. Agastya plans to drop his job to work for a publishing firm owned by his second cousin, Tonic. His father exhorts him to keep up the profession and his uncle also encourages him to maintain his job by reminding him of the security of a government position. Before he comes back to the Madna, he realizes that Dhrubo is also in preparation for civil service and unlike others of his age, he has no worries about the job hunt and financial insecurity. Yet, he envies them and feels guilty.

Back in Madna, collector Srivastav orders Agastya to guide an English man named John Avery and his Indian wife Sita, who are in search of the spot where John Avery’s grandfather was attacked and killed by a tiger. Later, Agastya is posted as a block development officer in Jumpanna where half of the population (12,000) is tribals. Here, he rides in a jeep with additional district health officer Tiwari to visit Baba Ramanna’s Rehabilitation home in Gorapak. Agastya excuses himself from the revenue meeting enacting like a sick one and writes to the collector that he is going to consult the doctor Multani. Doctor is also greedy for wealth and has no call for the profession.

    Later on, Agastya discovers certain meaning to his profession and works for the benefit of the people. He acts as a responsible officer when he receives a complaint from a tribal woman on shortage of water in Chipanthi. Though the region is notorious for the presence of Nexal militants, he brushes away security concerns and visits the place. His meeting with a Nexalite named Rao equips him to understand the plight of tribals in rural India and the exploitation they suffer from bureaucrats. He also learns from Rao that the forest officer Mohan Gandhi has seduced a tribal woman and the men of her village have cut off his arms as punishment.  Later, District Development Officer Bajaj talks about tribal’s ignorance and points at the fact the mainstream Indian society has not engaged with them since independence in 1947. Measures taken by government has helped only to “ruin distinctive tribal cultures without providing any real compensation”.At last, he gets a post of Assistant Collector, in Koltanga; it is one-tenth the size of Madna without industries and hotels. Shankar has also transferred into Koltanga by greasing the palm of a minister. Agastya affirms that he is not going Koltanga, but he has to go home and think about. Before his recourse, he writes to Dhrubo informing that he is taking a year off to discover himself. He starts his last journey giving “the last false promise” to Srivastav and Kumar.

Click here to read Part-1 of the summary

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Tuesday, 8 September 2020

Summary and Analysis of ENGLISH, AUGUST: An Indian Story by Upamanyu Chatterjee Part -1

Upamanyu Chatterjee’s debut novel, ENGLISH, AUGUST: An Indian Story (1988) depicts the journey of a young urban Indian to self discovery. The story is told from the view point of an omniscient narrator and the title, ‘English August’ refers the protagonist ‘Agastya Sen’ who is named after a mythological Hindu rishi. His friends anglicize ‘Agastya’ into ‘August’ which connotes the feeling of un-Indian or western in Indian soil and they call him ‘Ogu’, ‘the English type’, hey English’, and ‘hey Anglo’. This multiplicity of naming hints at the fragmented identity and alienation he undergoes. 

The central character, Agastya Sen, is a twenty-four year old civil service trainee and the son of a Bengali father, Madhusudhan Sen, and a Goan, Christian mother. Unlike his friends who have opted for higher studies in western universities, Agastya Sen joins Indian civil service training to satisfy his father’s wish for his son to have a stable government job. He is directionless and finds solace in marijuana, masturbation and the Meditations of Marcus Aurelius. The novel brilliantly satirizes the degeneration of Indian bureaucracy and reveals the urban rural divide in India.

A conversation between Agastya and his friend Dhrubo on the inconveniences of joining civil service training marks the beginning of the novel. As the two of them belongs to urban upper class family, they look down at and make fun of going to small towns. He soon joins the Indian administrative training in a small town named Madna which is described as one of the hottest and unhealthiest places in India. The novel is a socio political document as it reveals the transformation of Indian villages from thick forests to industrial small towns. Agastya Sen feels alienated in this hostile climate and culture. During the training period, he has to deal with various district offices and he stays in a government rest house with an unhygienic servant Vasanth and his family.  District collectors enjoy power and prestige in rural India. The novelist spares no chance to crack fun at the expense of these corrupt bureaucrats who take advantage of the veneration of the villagers towards them. 

The comic features of the novel are drawn largely from the portrayal of bureaucrats with their exquisite mannerisms, personal enmity and narrow social life. These officials are scandal mongers, corrupt and willing to defend their interest by any means. The novel throws light on the hitherto unexpressed life of these degenerate civil servants and it also narrates the consequences meted out by those who have tried to break open these impositions. The case of district collector Antony, who is made a scapegoat in a Hindu-muslim riot and is transferred by corrupt politicians, is a perfect example of how genuine officers are paid for their service by the corrupt public servants. The reports in Dainik newspaper, which is famous for its sensational news about the collector, minister and other bureaucrats, shows the stagnation and sterility of the life of people in the small town.

The first half of the novel introduces characters, especially the corrupt bureaucrats, and life in Madna. Agastya is disinterested and disgusted with his job and he lives three life; the official, the unofficial and the secret one in his room. He feels self-alienated, frustrated and dissatisfied. Agastya attends duty at 11 in the morning and works until lunch. He is sensible of the scandal loving people of Madna and tells a number of lies regarding his age and family. He says he is twenty-eight years old in his twenty-four. 

Though discontented with the life, he befriends with Deputy Engineer Shankar, Mr. Sathe who professes yellow journalism, Chief-in Police Kumar, Forest Officer Mohan Gandhi and doctor Multani and keeps in touch with a college mate, Mahendra Bhatia. But, Agastya makes use of these relationships to cover up his alcoholism during work hours. Gradually, readers realize the extent of corruption these officials are delved in and their lack of any commitment to work. His relation with District Collector Srivastav is also hollow as Agastya depends on the latter for delicious lunch or dinner. He is attracted to the collector’s wife, who is a teacher in Janatha College. He “had begun to stone more” in Madna and suffers from insomnia. 

His self alienated, intensely personal life helps him to survive in Madna for the time being but later on it falls apart and life become unbearable in the small town. In the meanwhile, he exchanges letters with his girl friend Neera and also communicates with his father. His notion of marriage tells us the protagonist’s attitude to life.

"Eventually, he knew, he would marry, perhaps not out of passion, but out of convention,     which  was probably a safer thing. And then, in either case, in a few months or years they would tire of disagreeing with each other, or what was more or less the same thing, would be inured to each other’s odd and perhaps disgusting ways, the way she squeezed the tube of toothpaste and the way he drank from a glass and didn’t rinse it, and they would slide into a placid and comfortable unhappiness, and may be unseeingly watch TV every day, each still a cocoon."

The conflict between the intense personal life and the world outside is narrated in this quote. 


Click here to read Part-2 of the summary