Music for Mohini is strikingly not quite the same as So Many Hungers! It talks about the concept of social freedom and the writer avows that the most important form of freedom is the social freedom to have a country with real advancements and progress. This type of freedom provides the basis of actual establishment of every dimension of freedom. Thus the author has presented the image of hero in the novel, named, Jayadev who has full dedication towards social freedom which is most extreme worthiness for India at that time after she accomplished her political freedom. Jayadev, a social reformer wanted to make his town Behula a model village socially. He has the realisation that this task is more vital for him rather than writing books which includes hard work, strain and battle. Yet, it merits doing no matter what, for without social opportunity, as he says to Mohini that political freedom is pretty much pointless: "Our political freedom is worth little without social uplift...That implies struggle" He was of the opinion to educate the town ladies how to peruse, read and write and in this manner to grant them the primary components of knowledge. Jayadev is a man …show more content…
In any case, the young fellow is resolved to battle for person opportunity, for "the principal right of a man or a lady to pick a mate outside his or her position." Like Sudha and Harindra, Mohini, as well, needs to hold up under a wide range of tragedies, for she is denied singular flexibility. Her entire identity is pressed and squashed by the social traditions and customs of the Big House to which she has a place after her