Novels, Society and History
Novels, Society and History
Novels, Society and History
a n d History
In the previous chapter you read about the rise of print culture and
how new forms of communication reshaped the way people thought
about themselves or related to each other. You also saw how print
culture created the possibility of new forms of literature. In this
Societyand History
chapter we will study the history of one such form – the novel – a
history that is closely connected to the making of modern ways of
Novels, Society
thinking. We will first look at the history of the novel in the West,
and then see how this form developed in some of the regions of
India. As you will see, despite their differences, there were many
Novels,
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1 The Rise of the Novel
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issued in six volumes priced at three shillings each – which was
more than what a labourer earned in a week.
But soon, people had easier access to books with the introduction
of circulating libraries in 1740. Technological improvements in
printing brought down the price of books and innovations in
marketing led to expanded sales. In France, publishers found that
they could make super profits by hiring out novels by the hour. The
novel was one of the first mass-produced items to be sold. There
were several reasons for its popularity. The worlds created by novels
were absorbing and believable, and seemingly real. While reading
novels, the reader was transported to another person’s world, and
began looking at life as it was experienced by the characters of the
novel. Besides, novels allowed individuals the pleasure of reading in
private, as well as the joy of publicly reading or discussing stories
Fig. 1 – Cover page of Sketches by ‘Boz’.
with friends or relatives. In rural areas people would collect to hear Charles Dickens’s first publication was a collection of
one of them reading a novel aloud, often becoming deeply involved journalistic essays entitled Sketches by ‘Boz’ (1836).
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Fig. 4 – Leo Tolstoy (1828-1910).
Tolstoy was a famous Russian novelist who wrote extensively on
rural life and community.
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In other novels too, Dickens focused on the terrible conditions of
urban life under industrial capitalism. His Oliver Twist (1838) is the
tale of a poor orphan who lived in a world of petty criminals and
beggars. Brought up in a cruel workhouse (see Fig. 6), Oliver was
finally adopted by a wealthy man and lived happily ever after.
But not all novels about the lives of the poor gave readers the comfort
of a happy ending. Emile Zola’s Germinal (1885) on
the life of a young miner in France explores in harsh detail the
grim conditions of miners’ lives. It ends on a note of despair: the
strike the hero leads fails, his co-workers turn against him, and
hopes are shattered.
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that were fast vanishing. This was actually a time when large farmers
fenced off land, bought machines and employed labourers to
produce for the market. The old rural culture with its independent
farmers was dying out. We get a sense of this change in Hardy’s
Mayor of Casterbridge (1886). It is about Michael Henchard, a successful
grain merchant, who becomes the mayor of the farming town of
Casterbridge. He is an independent-minded man who follows his
own style in conducting business. He can also be both unpredictably
generous and cruel with his employees. Consequently, he is no
match for his manager and rival Donald Farfrae who runs his
business on efficient managerial lines and is well regarded for he
is smooth and even-tempered with everyone. We can see that
Hardy mourns the loss of the more personalised world that is
disappearing, even as he is aware of its problems and the advantages Fig. 8 – Thomas Hardy (1840-1928).
New words
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Fig. 9 – A girl reading, a painting by Jean Renoir (1841-1919).
By the nineteenth century, images of women reading silently, in
the privacy of the room, became common in European paintings.
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The novels of Jane Austen give us a glimpse of the world of women
in genteel rural society in early-nineteenth-century Britain. They
make us think about a society which encouraged women to look
for ‘good’ marriages and find wealthy or propertied husbands. The
first sentence of Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice states: ‘It is a truth
universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good
fortune, must be in want of a wife.’ This observation allows us to
see the behaviour of the main characters, who are preoccupied with
marriage and money, as typifying Austen’s society.
But women novelists did not simply popularise the domestic role
of women. Often their novels dealt with women who broke Fig. 11 – Jane Austen
(1775-1817).
established norms of society before adjusting to them. Such stories
allowed women readers to sympathise with rebellious actions. In
Charlotte Bronte’s Jane Eyre, published in 1847, young Jane is shown
as independent and assertive. While girls of her time were expected
to be quiet and well behaved, Jane at the age of ten protests against
the hypocrisy of her elders with startling bluntness. She tells her
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Aunt who is always unkind to her: ‘People think you a good woman,
but you are bad ... You are deceitful! I will never call you aunt as
long as I live.’
Box 1
Women novelists
George Eliot (1819-1880) was the pen-name of Mary Ann Evans.
A very popular novelist, she believed that novels gave women a
special opportunity to express themselves freely. Every woman
could see herself as capable of writing fiction:
Fig. 13 – Charlotte Bronte (1816-1855).
‘Fiction is a department of literature in which women can, after
their kind, fully equal men … No educational restrictions can shut
women from the materials of fiction, and there is no species of art
that is so free from rigid requirements.’
George Eliot, ‘Silly novels by lady novelists’, 1856.
G.A. Henty’s historical adventure novels for boys were also wildly
G.A. Henty (1832-1902): Novels, Society and History
popular during the height of the British empire. They aroused the
In Under Drake’s Flag (1883) two young
excitement and adventure of conquering strange lands. They were
Elizabethan adventurers face their apparently
set in Mexico, Alexandria, Siberia and many other countries. They approaching death, but still remember to assert
were always about young boys who witness grand historical events, their Englishness:
get involved in some military action and show what they called ‘Well, Ned, we have had more good fortune than
we could have expected. We might have been
‘English’ courage.
killed on the day when we landed, and we have
spent six jolly months in wandering together as
Love stories written for adolescent girls also first became popular
hunters on the plain. If we must die, let us
in this period, especially in the US, notably Ramona (1884) by Helen behave like Englishmen and Christians.’
Hunt Jackson and a series entitled What Katy Did (1872) by Sarah
Chauncey Woolsey, who wrote under the pen-name Susan Coolidge.
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1.6 Colonialism and After
The novel originated in Europe at a time when it was colonising the
rest of the world. The early novel contributed to colonialism by
making the readers feel they were part of a superior community of
fellow colonialists. The hero of Daniel Defoe’s Robinson Crusoe (1719)
is an adventurer and slave trader. Shipwrecked on an island, Crusoe
treats coloured people not as human beings equal to him, but as
inferior creatures. He rescues a ‘native’ and makes him his slave. He
does not ask for his name but arrogantly gives him the name Friday.
But at the time, Crusoe’s behaviour was not seen as unacceptable or
odd, for most writers of the time saw colonialism as natural.
Colonised people were seen as primitive and barbaric, less than
human; and colonial rule was considered necessary to civilise them,
to make them fully human. It was only later, in the twentieth century,
that writers like Joseph Conrad (1857-1924) wrote novels that
showed the darker side of colonial occupation.
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2 The Novel Comes to India
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The case of Andhra Pradesh was strikingly similar. Kandukuri
Viresalingam (1848-1919) began translating Oliver Goldsmith’s Vicar
of Wakefield into Telugu. He abandoned this plan for similar reasons
and instead wrote an original Telugu novel called Rajasekhara Caritamu
in 1878.
Pariksha-Guru reflects the inner and outer world of the newly emerging
middle classes. The characters in the novel are caught in the difficulty
of adapting to colonised society and at the same time preserving
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their own cultural identity. The world of colonial modernity seems Discuss
to be both frightening and irresistible to the characters. The novel Write about two important characteristics of the
tries to teach the reader the ‘right way’ to live and expects all ‘sensible early Hindi novel.
men’ to be worldly-wise and practical, to remain rooted in the
values of their own tradition and culture, and to live with dignity
and honour.
In the novel we see the characters attempting to bridge two different
worlds through their actions: they take to new agricultural technology,
modernise trading practices, change the use of Indian languages,
Box 4
making them capable of transmitting both Western sciences and
Indian wisdom. The young are urged to cultivate the ‘healthy habit’ The novel in Assam
of reading the newspapers. But the novel emphasises that all The first novels in Assam were written by
missionaries. Two of them were translations of
this must be achieved without sacrificing the traditional values of
Bengali including Phulmoni and Karuna. In 1888,
the middle-class household. With all its good intentions, Pariksha- Assamese students in Kolkata formed the Asamya
Guru could not win many readers, as it was perhaps too moralising Bhasar Unnatisadhan that brought out a journal
called Jonaki . This journal opened up the
in its style.
opportunities for new authors to develop the
The writings of Devaki Nandan Khatri created a novel-reading novel. Rajanikanta Bardoloi wrote the first major
historical novel in Assam called Manomati (1900).
public in Hindi. His best-seller, Chandrakanta – a romance with It is set in the Burmese invasion, stories of which
dazzling elements of fantasy – is believed to have contributed the author had probably heard from old soldiers
immensely in popularising the Hindi language and the Nagari who had fought in the 1819 campaign. It is a
tale of two lovers belonging to two hostile families
script among the educated classes of those times. Although it was
who are separated by the war and finally
apparently written purely for the ‘pleasure of reading’, this novel reunited.
also gives some interesting insights into the fears and desires of its
reading public.
It was with the writing of Premchand that the Hindi novel achieved
excellence. He began writing in Urdu and then shifted to Hindi,
remaining an immensely influential writer in both languages. He drew
on the traditional art of kissa-goi (storytelling). Many critics think
that his novel Sewasadan (The Abode of Service), published in 1916,
lifted the Hindi novel from the realm of fantasy, moralising and
Novels, Society and History
simple entertainment to a serious reflection on the lives of ordinary
people and social issues. Sewasadan deals mainly with the poor
condition of women in society. Issues like child marriage and dowry Fig. 16a – Lakshminath
are woven into the story of the novel. It also tells us about the ways Bezbaruah (1868–1938)
in which the Indian upper classes used whatever little opportunities
they got from colonial authorities to govern themselves.
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and love stories based on historical events. Another group of novels
depicted the inner world of domestic life in contemporary settings.
Domestic novels frequently dealt with the social problems and
romantic relationships between men and women.
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3 Novels in the Colonial World
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Box 7
world of print for the first time. The way characters spoke in a
novel began to indicate their region, class or caste. Thus novels made
their readers familiar with the ways in which people in other parts
of their land spoke their language.
heroes and heroines with ideal qualities, who their readers could
admire and imitate. How were these ideal qualities defined? In many
novels written during the colonial period, the ideal person successfully
deals with one of the central dilemmas faced by colonial subjects:
how to be modern without rejecting tradition, how to accept ideas
coming from the West without losing one’s identity.
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He was also a ‘first-rate Sanskrit scholar’. He dressed in Western
clothes. But, at the same time, he kept a long tuft of hair, according
to the Nayar custom.
The heroes and heroines in most of the novels were people who
lived in the modern world. Thus they were different from the ideal
or mythological characters of the earlier poetic literature of India.
Under colonial rule, many of the English-educated class found new
Western ways of living and thinking attractive. But they also feared
that a wholesale adoption of Western values would destroy their
traditional ways of living. Characters like Indulekha and Madhavan
showed readers how Indian and foreign lifestyles could be brought
together in an ideal combination.
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4 Women and the Novel
Many people got worried about the effects of the novel on readers
who were taken away from their real surroundings into an imaginary
world where anything could happen. Some of them wrote in
newspapers and magazines, advising people to stay away from the
immoral influence of novels. Women and children were often singled
out for such advice: they were seen as easily corruptible.
Some parents kept novels in the lofts in their houses, out of their
children’s reach. Young people often read them in secret. This passion
was not limited only to the youth. Older women – some of whom
could not read – listened with fascinated attention to popular
Tamil novels read out to them by their grandchildren – a nice
reversal of the familiar grandma’s tales!
But women did not remain mere readers of stories written by men;
soon they also began to write novels. In some languages, the early
creations of women were poems, essays or autobiographical
pieces. In the early decades of the twentieth century, women in
Fig. 21 – A woman reading,
south India also began writing novels and short stories. A reason woodcut by Satyendranath Bishi.
for the popularity of novels among women was that it allowed The woodcut shows how women
were discovering the pleasure of
for a new conception of womanhood. Stories of love – which reading. By the end of the
was a staple theme of many novels – showed women who could nineteenth century, images of
women reading became common in
choose or refuse their partners and relationships. It showed popular magazines in India.
women who could to some extent control their lives. Some women
authors also wrote about women who changed the world of both
men and women. Source A
Rokeya Hossein (1880-1932) was a reformer who, after she was Why women should not read novels
widowed, started a girl’s school in Calcutta. She wrote a satiric From a Tamil essay published in 1927:
India and the Contemporary World
fantasy in English called Sultana’s Dream (1905) which shows a topsy- ‘Dear children, don’t read these novels, don’t
turvy world in which women take the place of men. Her n o v e l even touch them. Your life will be ruined. You
will suffer disease and ailments. Why did the good
Padmarag also showed the need for women to reform their condition
Lord make you – to wither away at a tender
by their own actions. age? To suffer in disease? To be despised by
your brothers, relatives and those around you?
No. No. You must become mothers; you must
lead happy lives; this is the divine purpose. You
New words who were born to fulfil this sublime goal, should
you ruin your life by going crazy after despicable
Satire – A form of representation through writing, drawing, novels?’
painting, etc. that provides a criticism of society in a manner that Essay by Thiru. Vi. Ka, Translated by A.R.
Venkatachalapathy
is witty and clever Source
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It is not surprising that many men were suspicious of women writing Box 8
novels or reading them. This suspicion cut across communities.
Women with books
Hannah Mullens, a Christian missionary and the author of Karuna o
‘These days we can see women in black bordered
Phulmonir Bibaran (1852), reputedly the first novel in Bengali, tells her sarees with massive books in their hands, walking
readers that she wrote in secret. In the twentieth century, Sailabala inside their houses. Often seeing them with these
Ghosh Jaya, a popular novelist, could only write because her husband books in hand, their brothers or husbands are
seized with fear – in case they are asked for
protected her. As we have seen in the case of the south, women and meanings.’
girls were often discouraged from reading novels. Sadharani, 1880.
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education, and returns as the judge in the local court. Meanwhile, the
villagers, thinking that the landlord’s men had killed him, file a case.
At the conclusion of the trial, the judge reveals his true identity, and
the Nambuthiri repents and reforms his ways. Saraswativijayam stresses
the importance of education for the upliftment of the lower castes.
From the 1920s, in Bengal too a new kind of novel emerged that
depicted the lives of peasants and ‘low’ castes. Advaita Malla
Burman’s (1914-51) Titash Ekti Nadir Naam (1956) is an epic about
the Mallas, a community of fisherfolk who live off fishing in the
river Titash. The novel is about three generations of the Mallas,
about their recurring tragedies and the story of Ananta, a child born
of parents who were tragically separated after their wedding night.
Ananta leaves the community to get educated in the city. The novel
describes the community life of the Mallas in great detail, their Holi
and Kali Puja festivals, boat races, bhatiali songs, their relationships
of friendship and animosity with the peasants and the oppression
of the upper castes. Slowly the community breaks up and the Mallas
start fighting amongst themselves as new cultural influences from
the city start penetrating their lives. The life of the community and
that of the river is intimately tied. Their end comes together: as the
river dries up, the community dies too. While novelists before Burman
had featured ‘low’ castes as their protagonists, Titash is special because
the author is himself from a ‘low-caste’, fisherfolk community.
Over time, the medium of the novel made room for the experiences
of communities that had not received much space in the literary
scene earlier. Vaikkom Muhammad Basheer (1908-94), for example,
was one of the early Muslim writers to gain wide renown as a
novelist in Malayalam.
Basheer had little formal education. Most of his works were based
India and the Contemporary World
on his own rich personal experience rather than on books from the
past. When he was in class five at school, Basheer left home to take
part in the Salt Satyagraha. Later he spent years wandering in different
parts of India and travelling even to Arabia, working in a ship, living Fig. 23 – Basheer carrying books.
with Sufis and Hindu sanyasis, and training as a wrestler. In his early years as a writer,
Basheer had great difficulty
Basheer’s short novels and stories were written in the ordinary earning a living from his books.
He often sold them himself,
language of conversation. With wonderful humour, Basheer’s novels carrying copies personally to
spoke about details from the everyday life of Muslim households. houses and shops. In some of his
stories, Basheer wrote about his
He also brought into Malayalam writing themes which were days as a vendor of his own
considered very unusual at that time – poverty, insanity and life books.
in prisons.
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5 The Nation and its History
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way was to include various classes in the novel so that they could be Box 9
seen to belong to a shared world. Premchand’s novels, for instance,
Rabindranath Tagore (1861-1941) developed the
are filled with all kinds of powerful characters drawn from all levels Bengali novel after Bankim’s death. His early novels
of society. In his novels you meet aristocrats and landlords, middle- were historical; he later shifted to writing stories
about domestic relationships. He was mainly
level peasants and landless labourers, middle-class professionals and
preoccupied with the condition of women and
people from the margins of society. The women characters are nationalism. Both concerns are featured in his
strong individuals, especially those who come from the lower classes Ghare Baire (1916) translated in 1919 as The
and are not modernised. Unlike many of his contemporaries, Home and the World. The story is about Bimala,
the wife of Nikhilesh, a liberal landlord who
Premchand rejected the nostalgic obsession with ancient history. believes that he can save his country by patiently
Instead, his novels look towards the future without forgetting the bettering the lives of its poor and marginal
sections. But Bimala is attracted to Sandip, her
importance of the past.
husband’s friend and a firebrand extremist. Sandip
Drawn from various strata of society, Premchand’s characters create is so completely dedicated to throwing out the
British that he does not mind if the poor ‘low’
a community based on democratic values. The central character of castes suffer and Muslims are made to feel like
his novel Rangbhoomi (The Arena), Surdas, is a visually impaired beggar outsiders. By becoming a part of Sandip’s group,
from a so-called ‘untouchable’ caste. The very act of choosing such Bimala gets a sense of self-worth and self-esteem.
Rabindranth also shows the contradictory effects
a person as the ‘hero’ of a novel is significant. It makes the lives of of nationalist involvement for women. Bimala may
the most oppressed section of society as worthy of literary reflection. be admired by the young males of the group
We see Surdas struggling against the forcible takeover of his land but she cannot influence their decisions. Indeed
she is used by Sandip to acquire funds for the
for establishing a tobacco factory. As we read the story we wonder movement. Tagore’s novels are striking because
about industrialisation and its impact on society and people. Who they make us rethink both man-woman
does it serve? Must other ways of living be sacrificed for it? The relationships and nationalism.
Activity
Read Godan. Write briefly on:
Ø How Premchand depicts the life of peasants in the novel.
Ø What the novel tells us about the life of peasants during the Fig. 26 – Portrait of
Premchand (1880-
Great Depression.
1936).
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Conclusion
We have seen how, over the course of its history in both the West
and in India, the novel became part of the lives of different sections
of people. Developments in print technologies allowed the novel
to break out of its small circle of readers and introduced fresh
ways of reading. But through their stories, novels have also shown a
capacity to include and focus on the lives of those who were not
often known to literate and middle-class circles. We have seen some
examples of these in Premchand, but they are equally present in the
works of other novelists.
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Write in brief
Write in brief
c) After 1740, the readership of novels began to include poorer people.
d) Novelists in colonial India wrote for a political cause.
2. Outline the changes in technology and society which led to an increase in
readers of the novel in eighteenth-century Europe.
3. Write a note on:
a) The Oriya novel
b) Jane Austen’s portrayal of women
c) The picture of the new middle class which the novel Pariksha-Guru portrays.
Discuss
1. Discuss some of the social changes in nineteenth-century Britain which Thomas Hardy
and Charles Dickens wrote about.
2. Summarise the concern in both nineteenth-century Europe and India about women
reading novels. What does this suggest about how women were viewed?
3. In what ways was the novel in colonial India useful for both the colonisers as well as the
nationalists?
4. Describe how the issue of caste was included in novels in India. By referring to any two Discuss
novels, discuss the ways in which they tried to make readers think about existing social
India and the Contemporary World
issues.
5. Describe the ways in which the novel in India attempted to create a sense of pan-Indian
belonging.
Project
Imagine that you are a historian in 3035 AD. You have just located two novels which were written
in the twentieth century. What do they tell you about society and customs of the time?
Project
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