Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://elibrary.tucl.edu.np/handle/123456789/3983
Title: Subversive Political Irony in Doris Lessing’sThe Fifth Child
Authors: Gin, Bamdev
Keywords: society;Politics
Issue Date: 2009
Publisher: Department of English
Institute Name: Central Department of English
Level: Masters
Abstract: The Fifth Child by Doris Lessing depicts the social problems created on the basis of the demarcation between right and wrong, good and bad, able and disabled, normal and abnormal, correct and incorrect and so on. At the same time Lessing discloses the fact that the mother, Harriet protests against male domination as well as the decent society by bearing her fifth child, Ben who is somewhat deformed and disabled. Lessing indeed subverts such dangerous hierarchy in which the are ignored and oppressed by drawing the characters, Harriet and her deformed son, Ben. In addition to this, the expectation carried out by Harriet and David gets destroyed in such a way that it eventually takes a new shape as a newly emerged plight that is intolerable and burdensome to all of them which in literary sense is the irony. Meantime love and compassion that Harriet has for this deformed child, Ben subverts the entire morally constituted framework of society which can be termed as the politics of irony. In short lessing gives voice to the voiceless female characters like Harriet and her disabled son, Ben by means of subversive political irony and at the same time subverts the conservative patriarchal values and normalcy.
URI: http://elibrary.tucl.edu.np/handle/123456789/3983
Appears in Collections:English

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