Voices beyond Death: The Spirits of Women in the Short Stories by Rabindranath Tagore
DOI
Access Status
This content is available to Open Access.
To download content simply use the links provided under the Files section.
More information about licence and terms of use for this content is available in the Rights section.
Type
Article
Date
2021
Journal Title
Journal of Women's Studies: University of North Bengal
Journal Editor
Mitra, Zinia
Dutta, Beethika Moni
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
University of North Bengal
Statistics
Total views and downloads
Views
157Downloads
204Citation
Sarkar, S. (2021). Voices beyond Death: The Spirits of Women in the Short Stories by Rabindranath Tagore. Journal of Women’s Studies: University of North Bengal, X, 39–53. https://ir.nbu.ac.in/handle/123456789/4863
Authors
Advisor
Editor
Abstract
Fears of ghosts and ghoul and devotion towards the unnumbered local
gods and goddess have always been an integral part of Bengali belief system.
Inevitably, this has left a profound impact on Bengali literature as well. Be it the
great Nobel laureate Rabindranath Tagore or the compositor of Bengali folk
narratives Dakshinaranjan Mitra – spirits and ghosts have always been an
inseparable part of Bengali writers’ creations. Though often reduced to the
category of children’s fictions, many of these Bengali ghosts’ stories have
crossed the boundaries of superstitions and beliefs and plunged into the opaque
realm of human psychology. The current paper is an attempt to delve into this
uncertain realm of human psyche with the help of three short stories by
Rabindranath Tagore – ‘Kankal’ (The Skeleton),’Nishithe’ (In the Night),
‘Monihara’ (The Lost Jewel). The paper with the help of psychoanalytical
feministic philosophy has attempted to explore how these ghosts’ stories have
gone beyond the limits of local beliefs and superstitious sensations and brought
out the problematic representation of gender roles and identities in
contemporary Bengali society. In order to bring out the societal fissures the
current paper here tries to raise such hypothetical questions as: i) How do these
short stories expose in a covert manner the subjugation of the women in
contemporary Bengali society? ii) How has the woman-self obtained voice after
death in these short stories? iii) How do these stories register protests by the
woman-spirits against the patriarchal Bengali socio-cultural beliefs and system?
Description
Citation
Accession No
Call No
Book Title
Edition
Volume
ISBN No
Volume Number
X
Issue Number
ISSN No
2320-3625
eISSN No
Pages
Pages
39 - 53