Existential Crisis in Samrat Upadhyay’s Buddha’s Orphans
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Department of English, Prithvi Narayan Campus, Pokhara
Abstract
As existent being, a man identifies with the word through his thoughts and
perceptions. He is driven to seek meaning by the every complexities and
contradictions of existence. The sense of lack of meaning or purpose is very apparent
in twentieth century literature, philosophy and art. The thesis postulates’ critical
question whether life is worth living or should be voluntarily terminated. Being
brought face to face with the absurd world, a person longs for answers that will clarify
his position and the purpose in this universe, but being unable to find satisfactory
explanations he succumbs despair. The futile existence derives a person to the brink
of despair and makes himself to contemplate suicide out of sheer despondency and
hopelessness. It also stresses that each human being is thrown in to world in which
pain, frustration, sickness, contempt, malaise and death predominately exists. This
problem has been highlighted in Albert Camus's The Realization of Absurdity. This
issue has been highlighted in the novel Buddha's Orphans. Through the analysis of
major characters, the study aims to disclose how anxiety in general, occupies a major
place in the existential spare of life in twentieth century. It also focuses that existential
crisis revel in minor and major characters in Upadhyay's novel.
