Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://elibrary.tucl.edu.np/handle/123456789/12671
Title: Satire in V.S. Naipaul’s The Mystic Masseur
Authors: Mahato, Bishwanath Kumar
Keywords: Social criticism;Indian communities
Issue Date: 2010
Publisher: Department of English
Institute Name: Central Department of English
Level: Masters
Abstract: V.S. Naipaul in The Mystic Masseursatirizes cultural, social, political and economic aspects of Trinidad, a society that has encountered with the aftermath of colonialism.People there seem neither totally following the ways of colonizers nordo they remain consistent in the original culture of their own. Satire aims at picking up human or individual vices, follies, abuses, or shortcomings improving them by means of ridicule, derision, burlesque, irony, or other methods.People in Trinidad are detached from their original ways in different aspects of their life. They are aggravated by the colonizers’ life tendency and system. They are the victims of mimicry and do imitate the way European people verbalize. Thus their entanglement with sophistication and replication obliges them to stay suspended in the domain of nuisance and isolation. He trickily presents them that they seem much serious about colonial situation and contentious but they fail to carry on themselves within it.
URI: https://elibrary.tucl.edu.np/handle/123456789/12671
Appears in Collections:English

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