NARRATIVE TECHNIQUES IN CHETAN BHAGAT’S NOVEL ONE INDIAN GIRL
NARRATIVE TECHNIQUES IN CHETAN BHAGAT’S NOVEL
ONE INDIAN GIRL
-Deepak Dongre G
English Department
Research
Student.
VSKUniversity. Ballari
ABSTRACT
In the modern day
fiction writing, Chetan Bhagat has acquired great popularity in popular fiction
genre. With the publication of Five Point Someone Chetan Bhagat continues
to make an impression on the readers. His themes generally revolve around the
aspirations and problems faced by the youth. He is recognized as a youth icon
and in his recent novel he addresses the problems faced by One Indian
Girl in making her choices. Here in this novel, Chetan Bhagat is
successful in narrating the story of a girl in a female’s voice for the first
time. The first person narration is done
by the young ambitious girl named Radhika Mehta.
Here in this paper I
make an attempt to bring the narrative strategy used by Chetan Bhagat with
reference to globalization, media culture and feminism. By breaking the stereotypes
of the patriarchal society, Bhagat narrates to us the ambitions and experiences
of a young woman in her professional and personal life.
-------------
Keywords: Feminism,
Female Narrative, Narrative Techniques, Marketing, Publishing Industry
The first person
female narration is Chetan Bhagat’s first attempt to analyze the issues of a
woman in One Indian Girl. The narrative techniques that I try to explain
are writing styles and the narratives. The marketing strategies by a writer and
publishing house play an important role in the success of popular fiction. The
success of a popular fiction is determined by the number of copies sold. This demands
strategies that include use of theme, marketing, advertisement. The
advertisements and promotion through social media are the parts of these
strategies. The books by Chetan Bhagat looks driven by the market and promoted
by the media influence. The critical perceptions of the book hardly affect the
commercial success of some popular fiction. Chetan Bhagath entertains his
audience and writes formulaic fiction. In this paper I will try and analyze
these attempts the writer makes to formulate One Indian Girl.
Chetan
Bhagat is a popular fiction writer. His novels are bestsellers, received
greatly by readers. The media praised him as a great novelist. “International
Herald Tribune” calls ‘Bhagath has touched a nerve with the young Indian
readers and acquired almost cult status’.[1]
“The Hindu” praises him as ‘Chetan is also responsible for a seismic shift in
Indian writing in English’.[2]He
works as a columnist for leading English and Hindi newspapers. He focuses on
youth and their issues in his novels. He has a huge fan following, as he makes
the best use of social media. The writer’s audience is the middle class Indian
youth.[3]
His novels are Five Point Someone (2004), One Night @ The Call Center
(2005), The Three Mistakes of My Life (2008), Two States: The Story of My
Marriage (2009), Revolution 2020 (2011), Half Girlfriend (2014) and One Indian
Girl (2016). His non-fiction works
include What Young India Wants (2012) and Making India Awesome
(2015).
Chetan
Bhagat claims in one of his books that he writes to make people read. He tries
this by using simple and colloquial language in his novels. His stories are plain,
straight forward. He writes characters which are flat and allegorical. His
novels came in a time when the media culture and corporate culture was finding
changes. The internet provided a new means of acquiring knowledge; the new
technology helped the commercialization and commodification of novels. The new novels
needed marketing strategy in this period of technology. Chetan Bhagat makes
the best use of these advantages of technology to craft his works a bestseller. Though he has a great fan following, he feels that
the critics find his works very shallow. The critics find his works shallow for
the commercialization and formulaic nature of his novels.[4]
Chetan Bhagat
employs new ways of marketing strategies with every release of his books.
Releasing of teaser for a book release is a new approach to advertisement in
this book. The advertisement printed on the front page of a daily and his use
of social media are other techniques that show clever marketing. These techniques
have resulted in the raise of popularity of his books. These new tools used in
reaching the audience; in turn has made an impact on the reading habits of the
people.
In order to break
the stereotypes of the patriarchal society, Chetan Bhagat remarks sarcastically
in the blurb of the book One Indian Girl. Thus,
Hi, I am Radhika
Mehta and I am getting married this week. I work at Goldman Sachs, an
investment bank. Thank you for reading my story. However, let me warn you, You
may not like me too much. One, I make a lot of money.
Two, I have an
opinion on everything.
Three, I have had a
boyfriend before. Okay, maybe two.
Now if I was a guy,
you would be okay with all of this. But since I am a girl, these three things
don’t really make me too likeable, do they?[5]
The facts in the
blurb make people to raise questions, these kinds of situations raises in the
novel time and again. The reason that a girl is rich, is a problem for the
parents in finding a match. The girl has an opinion of her own and this leads
to tough situation from other characters. The society never expects her to be
in a relationship either. These things are anyhow acceptable with a boy but
with a girl it makes the eyebrow rise. With these points in the blurb, Chetan
Bhagat hints that he narrates the story about a girl who is different.
The novel explains
how an Indian girl can gain her social status with her intelligence and reach
great heights in her career. The book gives us the idea that a successful woman
needs no one to describe her, but need someone to support her in her endeavors.
This story looks interesting not just because of its theme but because of its
unique narrative style. The whole story is presented to us by the first person
narration of Radhika Mehta. She is a twenty seven years old successful Vice President
in an investment banking firm called Goldmann Sachs.
The story is
presented to the readers in flashback technique; Radhika narrates her story of
the present and narrates her past in three phases. She is introduced to us only
in the seventh page of the novel, till then the description of her marriage
ceremony is described as a setting to the story. The first few pages give us
the details of the lavish destination wedding in Goa.
Brijesh Gulati, a
character in the novel is the bridegroom who is to marry Radhika Mehta. He
tells Radhika about equal opportunities to women and defines feminism as
follows,
Feminism is a
movement that seeks to define, establish and achieve equal political,
economical, cultural, personal and social rights for women. A feminist is
someone who believes in this movement.
The character Brijesh being very empathetic,
understands the equal opportunities and rights expected by Radhika. One
Indian Girl foregrounds many conflicts between prejudices of patriarchal
society and democratic thinking of a female character. Whether the book is a debate of female
perspectives or the feministic approach is a question here. Female narration is
not necessarily called feminist perspective.
Image of One
Indian Girl, is another issue that needs close attention. Who is this
girl the author wants to represent? Is she a girl from a very poor, rural
background? Or is she a girl who is nerdy, good in her studies? She is a girl
who makes a lot of money and from the city. She goes to places which are
dreamlands for young people such as London, New York, Hong Kong. Bhagat uses
characters like Radhika to project some images of women in his novels. There is
a difference between the One Girl of the novel to everyone else in India. There
is another idea of Indian Girl here. Can we conclude that a girl born in India
is an Indian girl? Is Radhika Mehta represents Indian girls? Do Indian girls
want to be independent and become as ambitious as Radhika? The answer to these
questions is that there is an element of fantasy in the novel. These elements
are present in the other novels of Chetan Bhagat too. Neha in Five Point
Someone, Priyanka and Esha in One Night @ the Call Center are the
similar to Radhika, they are learned and from cities. Vidya in Three
Mistakes of My Life, Ananya in Two States and Riya in Half
Girlfriend the similarly planned characters. All the characters, themes and
the narratives of chetan bhagat seems to have influenced by the politics of
reception.
The major theme in One
Indian Girl includes shedding light to issues which are particular to women
and has not been recognized by the society. These issues are related to the
opportunities that a woman gets and how she is treated by the society.
According to the presuppositions of the patriarchal society, a girl who is more
educated, who earns more and more intelligent faces problems in getting
married. These themes are shown while discussing why a woman is made to choose
between work and home, her obsession with fair skin.
Chitralekha Manohar
criticizes the novel One Indian Girl as formulaic. In the literary
review of The Hindu he identifies that the novel is about a successful woman
who is suffering from insecurity. It is identified as a story where the central
premise of the novel is formulaic where an immensely successful woman suffers
from insecurity. This feeling of insecurity is because of the reason that the
men chose her whereas she wanted to keep her choice open. She needed to make
her choice in choosing her life partner. The reason that they selected her is
the main issue here.[6]
The debate here is the availability of the difference between woman’s
perspective and feminist narrative. Everything felt by a woman may be
considered woman’s perspective but may not be necessarily feministic narrative.
Feminism has a sociopolitical history of hundreds of years and it cannot be
limited to a woman’s perspective alone.
Bhagat has tries to
voice the woman’s narrative, for doing this he claims to have interviewed
hundreds of women and learned about their voices, dreams and wishes. Showcasing
these aspirations and dreams of a woman in general, it feels that Bhagat had
tried to include a lot of disharmony in the novel. The criticism about the book
is that it is only a woman’s perspective. This in turn resulted in ignoring the
view point of other characters.
In an interview
Chetan Bhagat answers the questions about the book that.,
“This
book is an opportunity to bring out their issues to the forefront, the writing
about woman’s issues is not a monopoly to be enjoyed by accredited feminists
alone. It need not always be espoused in boring intellectual pieces either.”[7]
Chetan
Bhagat feels that he should write accordingly to the views of his readers. His
intention is to reach his audience “ A
writer’s first job is to strike a chord, and not to please elitist circles,” by
this he means that He does it by caring for his readers and listening to them,”
It can’t be just the language, as it is simply the common language of the
people. It is more about what is being said and communicated that strikes a
chord.” Chetan strongly believes that the language should be colloquial- a
popular fiction has to be a dialogue with the people on the streets.[8]
Chetan bhagat’s use
of adjectives for the feminist critics and belittling feminism is nothing but a
true marketing strategy. The writer uses themes that has currency and uses it
to impress the readers. The main objective of any publishing house is to make
use of the current theme to make it commercially beneficial. The non
availability of critical acclaim to the popular art is a long debated argument.
The writer is not happy with the way his works are received by the critics. He
is sure to address the intention of making his works a sure success by his
marketing strategy. In an interview he defends that a true marketing strategy
is one where people never know that it is a marketing strategy. The writer’s
discontent towards not getting good critical acclaim turns him to pass judgment
on the “accredited” feminists and critics.
Prasum Bannerjee
attempts to analyse Chetan Bhagat’s works as choregraphed narrative. He
explains in his essay
It is the better
understanding of the nature of the “culture industry” that made Bhagat shift
from the chiefly romantic or the strongly feministic, the crudely comic and
slapstick forms of the fictions of the 90’s, and switch to issues, relatively
more relevant and concerning the new generation. As for the narrative, bhagat
resorts to the thriller and the fantastic form. But wherever may be the issue,
bhagat only knew very well, it has to be well packaged for the product to sell
as, as a new generation is too much conscious of the brand value of product and
how much it offers in a package.[9]
Chetan Bhagat is an intelligent
writer to make use of the current themes and finds success in projecting these
narratives in his novels. His recent attempt One Indian Girl is a well
tried effort to bring the inner voices of an ambitious girl. The story is
narrated well but considering it as a feministic approach to literature is a
tricky and puzzling.
References:
Bannerjee, Prasum.
“The Choreographed Narrative: Recontextualising the Narrative Strategies in
Chetan Bhagat’s Fiction” The Criterion Vol. III. Issue. I 1 March 2012.
Bhagat,
Chetan. One Night at the Call
Centre. Random House, 2007.print.
Bhagat,
Chetan. Five point someone: what not to do at IIT. India: Rupa & Co,2004. Print.
Bhagat,
Chetan. 2 States: The Story of
My Marriage. Sandesh S, 2009. Print.
Bhagat,
Chetan. Revolution 2020: LOVE.
CORRUPTION. AMBITION. Rupa Publications, 2011. Print.
Bhagat,
Chetan. What Young India Wants.
Rupa Publications, 2012. Print.
Bhagat,
Chetan. Five Point Someone.
Rupa Publications, 2004. Print.
Bhagat,
Chetan. Three Mistakes of My
Life: A Story About Business, Cricket and Religion. Rupa and Co, 2008. Print.
Bhagat, Chetan. Half Girlfriend, Rupa and Co, 2014.
Print.
Bhagat, Chetan. One
Indian Girl, Rupa and Co, 2016.Print.
Gahelot ,Manisha. “Chetan
Bhagat : A Real Taste of Refined Post Modern Indian Literature”, Thematics
Journal of English Criticism: A peer-reviewed interdisciplinary International
Research Journal, Vol-1 Issue 1 (Nov- 2011), ISSN: 2249-5959, Ed: Pp.13- 14
<http://shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in/bitstream/10603/13700/12/12_appendix.pdf>
Mishra, Ravi Kumar.
Representation of modern culture and modern trend in Chetan Bhagat fiction.
Research Scholar-An International Refereed e-Journal of Literary Explorations.
<http://researchscholar.co.in/downlo
ads/46-dr.-Ravi-Kumar-Mishra.pdf >
P. Somwanshi. Social
realism in R. K. Narayan and Chetan Bhagat’s novels: a comparison- Thematic
Journals. ISSN 0975-8313Vol 3. Issue 3. Sep 2012. pp. 174- 181.Paper ID:
0012012050
Rao, K. Damodar
1995. Penance as Multiple Response in Githa Hariharan’s The Thousand Faces of
Night Set III : vol.4, ed. R. K. Dhawan. New Delhi: Prestige Books.
R. A. Vats. Chetan Bhagat: A Libertarian.
Research Scholar - The Criterion: An International Journal in English. <http://www.the-criterion.com/V2/n2/June2011.pdf
Velmani,
N. "Revolutionising the Youth: A Study of Chetan Bhagat’s Novels” RSIRJLE
vol 4 Issue 1
<http://www.researchscholar.co.in/downloads/8-dr.-n.-velmani.pdf>web.
[1]
Chetan Bhagat. Five Point Someone: What not to do at IIT (New Delhi:
Rupa,2011) ii
[2]
Chetan Bhagat. Five Point Someone: What not to do at IIT (New Delhi:
Rupa,2011) ii
[3]
Velmani,
N. "Revolutionising the Youth: A Study of Chetan Bhagat’s Novels.” RSIRJLE
(Gwalior: Vol 4 Issue 1. Feb 2016) <http://www.researchscholar.co.in/downloads/8-dr.-n.-velmani.pdf> web.
[4]
Anjaria Ulka. “Chetan bhagat and the new
provincialism” American Book Review.
(Vol 36. number 6. Sept/Oct 2015 )pp.6-22.
[5] Chetan Bhagat. One Indian Girl, (New
Delhi: Rupa and Co. 2016)
[6]
Chitralekha manohar in “ A Script for Bollywood “ The Hindu (October 22,
2016.)<www.thehindu.com/books/literaryreview/A-Script-for-Bollywood/article16077803.ece>
[7] “Chetan
Bhagat’s One Indian Girl” Interview
with Chetan Bhagat. Ultra.news <https://ultra.news/s-e/21164/chetan-bhagats-one-indian-girl-sex-feminism>web.
[8] Ashwani Rana. "“Problems and Aspirations
of Youth” As Higlighted in the Novels of Chetan Bhagat." International Journal on Arts,
Management and Humanities (27
.2013): 66-72.
[9]
Prasum Bannerjee “the choreographed narrative: recontextualising the narrative
strategies in chetan Bhagat’s Fiction”. “The Criterion”
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