Browsing by Author "R, Padmavathi"
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Item MARGINALISATION AND PROSOCIAL BEHAVIOUR- THE CLARION CALL BY GLORIA NAYLOR IN BAILEY’S CAFÉ(IJARIIE, 2018) V, Tamilselvi; R, PadmavathiMarginalisation is the process of not allowing a group of people to participate in the society. They play their roles and find their identity with denied freedom. Black women's experiences in America regarding work,family, and community, their grounding in traditional Afro- American culture suggest that Afro-American women, as a group, experience a world different from that of those who are not black and female. Even long after the abolition of slavery, the complex issues of color, race, and gender remain the deciding factor in the treatment of black people. The color difference remains a singularly significant rationale for discrimination between the „lighter races and the darker races‟ of humanity all over the world. W.E.B. Dubois has observed in his work The Souls of Black Folk , “The problem of the twentieth century is the problem of the colour-line, - the relation of the darker to the lighter races of men in Asia and Africa, in America and the islands of the sea” (14). For black women, the colour line further becomes an edged weapon with gender bias and class for their oppression. Black women have always suffered because of being black, women, and poor within and outside black society. White man's exploitative attitude toward them and black man's belief in the concept of Anglo –Saxon beauty has forced black women to lead a life of deprivation and oppression. It results in a life full of miseries and humiliation. Factors like poverty, economic dependence, and racial discrimination have contributed toward low self-esteem and inferiority complex in black women. There is discrimination against them in education institutions, in jobs and in wages. They are the lowest at the economic and social ladder. Black women are depicted as what they are not, but appropriated by various groups of society in their own ways. There are physical, moral, and spiritual pressures on them. However, some of them show courage and fight back with all their might to resist all kinds of exploitation. Despite being partly defeated, these women never feel totally crushed. With self- respect and courage, they try to save themselves from their tormentors and develop self-consciousness.Item RHYTHM OF LIFE IN RICHARD WRIGHT’S NATIVE SON(Language in India, 2016-03) V, Tamilselvi; R, PadmavathiThe Existential Theory of Rollo May discusses the purpose of freedom and anxiety in human beings. The life of the protagonist Bigger Thomas in the novel Native Son gives him a chance to choose his own way of life to attain either mental or physical freedom to choose and direct his life either constructive or destructive. Richard Wright’s Native Son is a protest novel. The three sections, fear, flight, and fate, bring out the nature of human life and shows that psychological changes will always make everyone to face either construction or destruction to one’s self or to others. The life of Bigger Thomas in Native Son reveals the strength of individual in forming his self-identity in American soil hich made him gain