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.
"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.
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Dear readers,
ReplyDeleteThis is the first part of Summary and Analysis of English August: An Indian Story by Upamanyu Chatterjee. The second part will be published on 19th September 2020.
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