The White Tiger: A Challenge to the Ethnic Codes of India
Name: Pipavat Gopi
Course No. 13: The New Literature
Topic :- The White Tiger: A Challenge to the Ethnic Codes of India
M.A. English Semester – 4
Batch: 2015 – 2017
Department of English
Maharaja Krishnakumarsinhji Bhavnagar University
The White Tiger: A Challenge to
the Ethnic Codes of India :
The entire
novel is narrated through letters by Balram Halwai to the Premier of China, who will soon be
visiting India.
Balram is an Indian man from an impoverished background,
born in the village of Laxmangarh. Early on, he describes his basic story: he
transcended his humble beginnings to become a successful entrepreneur in
Bangalore, largely through the murder Mr. Ashok, who had been his employer. Balram also makes clear that
because of the murder, it is likely that his own family has been massacred in
retribution.
In Laxmangarh, Balram was raised in a large, poor family
from the Halwai caste, a caste that indicates sweet-makers. The village is
dominated and oppressed by the “Four Animals,” four landlords known as the Wild
Boar, the Stork, the Buffalo, and the Raven. Balram's father is a struggling rickshaw
driver, and his mother died when he is young. The alpha figure of his family
was his pushy grandmother, Kusum.
Abstract :
Aravind Adiga’s The White Tiger is the story of a man
named Balram Halwai and his journey of redemption from regression and
suppression. The writer paints a sardonic and dark picture of India. and this
article is an endeavor to bring out the truth behind his representation of the
nation. Adiga views India as being infested with servitude and swath, where a
man born in a poor family finds his chances of progress being limited and the
conditions prevailing in India are such that propel the self of an economically
deprived individual to justify a crime like murder, Language in India Political
Perspective and become a legal as well as social criminal. Adiga has raised
many issues in his work and it Is a fact beyond contestation that India is
being confronted by most of the issues put forth by him. But what concludeshis
work as an unacceptable representation of India is that he has increased the
magnitude of the problems manifold, so that they seem to be the dominant factor
in Indian society.It cannot be argued that his work is devoid of reality but it is indeed the exaggeration of reality,
which makes his work liable to criticism and splenetic reactions My paper would
critically examineand bring about clarity betweenAdiga’s India and the real
India. Keywords:Aravind Adiga, White Tiger, Light,Darkness, Servitude,
Defunct.Indian Diversity and Indian Writing in EnglishThe worst of times
usually brings about the best in nations. And India throughout its glorious
history, has encountered its fair share of adversities,whether they be in the
form of invasions, slavery or famines and so on.Each part of history is unique,
in its own way and the consciousness of the nation has always found an
effective medium to express itself through the writers of the age Same is the
case with modern day India in which the Chetan Bhagats, Vikram Seths, Amitav
Ghoshs have become the voice of the nation.However,the new age writers of India
will probably find the task more difficult than their predecessors,Primarily because
of India’s diversity and divisions existing in its social, economic and cultural
areas. Indiaone of the most diverse nations in the world is almost
incomprehensible and cannot be limited within the realms of a single book. Its
facts are just too many, to be amalgamated into one single work. That is why
Chetan Bhagat has more or less focused on college students.
Aravind Adiga is an Indian-Australian writer and journalist. He was born on
23 October 1974 in Madras.
The White
Tiger by Arvinda Adiga tells two interrelated and interested stories about
Balram and his success in life, his success causes moral decay. Darwinian
concept of survival of the fittest is very applicable to the novel. But what
are really matters a lot in this novel is changing phase of morality, which can
be considered as new morality which is full of immortal items.
Ø How the
white tiger challenge the ethnic codes of India?
Let’s have a look on this question very deeply with some basic arguments.
1. The way writer has narrates the Nation and the character is a bit shock
full to the readers. India has changed its face and the new face is full of
crime and corruption.
2. The situation has become in such a way that none will believe another one
easily. The image of India is changed and it is worse than the prior where the
humanity and honesty was at the centre of Indian’s Heart.
3.
The novel presents the elements
of darkness and light of India. It talks about the journey of darkness to
light. How Balram Halwai, as a son of poor rickshaw puller, escaped a life of
servitude to become a successful businessman, describing himself as an
Entrepreneur.
4.
Balram being the hero of the
novel talks about his life to Mr. Jiabao. He begins the story by telling about
his service at tea-shop with his brother at Dhanbad. While working in the
tea-shop he begins to learn about India’s government and economy from the
customer’s Conversation. Balram describe himself as a bad servant and decides
to be a Rich person.
5.
He learns how to drive and got a
job at Mr.Ashok’s house. Balram moves to Delhi and worked at Mr.Ashok’s place
as driver cum Servant. Being a servant he learned lot of things about the harsh
reality of life.
6.
The White Tiger is the form of
seven letters to the Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao who is planning to visit India
and the letter are delivered by a Bangalore Businessman Balram Halwai. In these
letters he tells him his journey from Munna to the White Tiger, the portrayal
of New India. When he becomes a driver of a rich family in New Delhi, he learns
that success often involves corruption, cruelty and inhumanity.
Delhi has become the synonym of crime and corruption. The situation has
become in a way strange that none believe another one easily.
Newspapers, now, speak of the cases of exploitation, mal-practice,
cheating, murder, bribery, fraud, etc. the image of India is changed and it is
worse than the prior one when honesty and humanity was at heart of India.
This is how the novel challenges the Ethnic codes which make people aware
of moral values but those values are subsiding day by day in India.
One more thing which is highlighted in the novel is communication between
rival countries India and China. Both these countries are emerging as next
powerful country of the world and Adiga has shown this idea even in the novel.
As Balram Halwai sends the Chinese premier letters, it means he makes him aware
of Indian culture and moral aspects. China is far better so far as their moral
codes are concerned.
The White Tiger is his rebuke of the cheerful and false notions of a new
and transformed India. Adiga has travelled various parts of the country
including places whose backwardness has shocked his sensibility. He himself
says about this novel that it has been the fruit of his labours as a reporter.
Balram Halwai writes about three countries with admiration;
Ø Only three nations have never let
themselves be ruled by foreigners: China, Afghanistan, and Abyssinia. These are
only three nations I admire. (The White Tiger)
Furthermore, Adiga writes: “ The future of the world lies with the yellow man and brown man because “our
erstwhile master, the white skinned man, has wasted himself through buggery,
mobile phone usage and drug abuse.”
(The White Tiger)
As it is mentioned earlier, he
tries to portray the picture of India, and India- China are emerging countries.
This novel also presents the
elements of darkness in the entire book. Balram Halwai comes from Biharic-rural
area and in New Delhi and Bangalore becomes villain’s character. His actions
question the morality of India. It is the country where the myths of Gods and
Goddesses exist, where the martyrs became the winners, where Gandhiji was born
and where humanity was at the heart.
Now, the condition is changed, the myths are washed away and the Gandhian
ideologies become ancestral and the martyrs become the foolish who sacrificed
their lives for their patriarchy.
Balram is not only a hero but a modern –Indian hero, and modern
heroes are different from their ancestors. Balram, at the same time, is not
only an entrepreneur but also a roguish criminal with a remarkable capacity of
self-justification.
The characters also seem superficial. Balram’s boss and his wife, Mr. Ashok
and Pinky Madam, are caricatures of the insensitive upper-class, cruel to and
remote from their employs. Balram and other driver Ram Prasad go for buying
liquor for his boss. This is the present India where wine becomes the
livelihood of modern man and people openly accept it and enjoy it. The White
Tiger also shows this mentality of Indian.
It advocates the idea of crime similar to the novel The Godfather by Mario
Puzo, at the very beginning of the novel he writes;
“Behind every great fortune there is a Great Crime”
- Balzac
(The Godfather by Mario Puzo)
Same thing is similar to this
novel and to the character of Balram Halwai, as his fortune and his modernity
as a master become a part of crime. He murders Mr. Ashok, his master, to whom
he was merely a driver but as he shows modern India, kills his master and
breaks the ethnic codes of India.
West culture and tradition have
affected Indian society in a way that Indian people even have surpassed all the
levels of immorality.
In the novel, the present
situation of India is demonstrated for example, there is the voting system and
it is already pre-planned whoever will become next minister is decided at the
beginning and sometimes they force people to vote particular party.
For example, Vijay, the bus conductor attacks and insults the
rickshaw-puller for election. Indian water system, roads, hospitals get
repaired or established when the election comes close. People cheer up the
Great Socialists saying that “Long live the Great Socialist.” But those
socialists are corrupted, they have reached to their success by committing
crime or murder which is the dark side of India.
This is how the moral ideas are broken down by those who crush the poor
people and slaves. Munna is the poor boy but when experiences reach to him, he
puts his step forward to Mr. Ashok. In older India, the multiculturalism
prevailed and all the castes and cultures lived together like bread and butter,
but, the present condition says something else about India.
Now, there is
no relation between Hindu and Muslim at least not that much of the prior one.
The number of murder rape and revenge is increasing each day.
This is how
the writings of the novel challenge the Ethical elements of India, as Mukesh
says to Ashok,
“This
is India, not America. There’s always a way out here”
(The White Tiger. pg-121)
(The White Tiger. pg-121)
With the help of Mukesh’
statement, it becomes clear what exactly he does is the comparison between
India and America so far as their moral conduct is concerned.
America is far better than India
because the people are not that far corrupted, first of all for them their
nationality becomes important and then other matters come as its follower. They
give priority to their nation whereas; Indian people are always concerned about
their own advantages. Patriarchy has evaporated from the mind of the
nationalists.
The novel also advocates the Marxist theory of all are equal but the novel
does not deal with the idea of social values. Balram kills Mr. Ashok to be
equal to him but at the same time he becomes a murderer.
That’s why it is said that,
All Are Equal, But Some Are More Equal Than Others.
- Animal Farm (1945)
The Indian nation has failed somewhere and the statue of Gandhiji in The
White Tiger is shown differently than the statue of him in Delhi. It also
presents the ideas of class conflict, society division and rapidly changing
world. Bourgeoisie class is at the centre because the number of this class
people is highest than any other and also it shows that progress can make an
unmake civilization, as it is called unethical progress.
The idea of uniform is also very big thing in this novel. For example,
dress, fashion, popular magazine, popular music, slang, television and internet
are demonstrated as alternative subversive cultures as against the established
standard cultures. There are layers of cultures like high culture and low
culture. It is having consumption behaviour like if you have money you spend.
Idea of success overtakes humanity which happens in the novel The White
Tiger. Changing behaviour and changing language become a share of this novel.
Conclusion :-
Aravind Adiga's The White Tiger observes the competitive “Jungle Law”
current in Indian culture by demonstrating how the traditional values and
behaviours of the caste system are undermined by the Western ideas of
individualism and capitalism which imply the fittest survive and succeed.
The desperately clinging traditions of caste prohibit success and
advancement, thus the only way to improve one's self is to betray such
institutions.
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