My Sainted Aunts Literary Elements

My Sainted Aunts Literary Elements

Genre

Anthology, drama, feminist

Setting and Context

Post-independence period of India, mostly rural Bengal

Narrator and Point of View

Omnipresent narrator, multiple POV

Tone and Mood

Tone is usually comic; mood changes from light to grim with every story.

Protagonist and Antagonist

Protagonists are usually women, antagonists are the family members who don't treat them well

Major Conflict

Major conflict in all the stories is lack of identity and independence, which leads to all women reacting in different ways. Mayadevi turns foreboding to preserve her dominion over her family after her husband's death in 'Mayadevi's London Yatra', while Gita becomes submissive in 'Life in a Palace'.

Climax

Climax is usually at a point when the protagonist has completed her journey

Foreshadowing

N/A

Understatement

Gita's will to live independently after her husband deserts her is not taken seriously by her family.

Allusions

Allusions are made to the Indian Freedom Struggle as Gita learns to live independently with Rani Ma.

Imagery

Mayadevi is mesmerized by the luxurious shopping complex his son takes her to. She thinks the place to be a heaven and is in disbelief that dirty British could have made something so regal.

Paradox

Gajanan is angry at Roopbala for being tall despite her nice nature. He marries for second time to a very short woman only to find her very disagreeable.

Parallelism

There is a parallelism in Gita and Rani Ma's stories in 'Life in a Palace'. Both of them are coming to terms to live life independently, Gita without her husband and Rani Ma without her authority after the end of colonial rule.

Metonymy and Synecdoche

N/A

Personification

Mini's dowry in 'A Child Bride' is hyped to a point where it appears as if her husband, Arjun, married the dowry and not her.

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