Shah's Facing My Phantoms: Concerns over Third World Women's Struggle for Identity
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Faculty of English
Abstract
This research is a study on the third world women's struggle for identity in
Sheeba Shah's Facing My Phantoms. In the novel, Sanjeevani has been presented as a
rebellious character. Her rebellion marks the changing consciousness of Nepali
women after the Maoist movement and its undercurrent to give voice to the
patriarchal Hindu social set up, the limitations on the choice for woman, it imposes
and opts for the freedom of women's choices. She discards the marriage proposal
arranged for her by her family and launches an attack upon the rigid patriarchal codes
Hindu society imposes upon the women showing her free spirit. In the quest for her
identity, she resists the stereotyped image of an average third world woman as an
uneducated, meek and coward.
