Preview

Mahashweta Devi

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
404 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Mahashweta Devi
Mahasweta Devi’s ‘The Hunt’ ‘The Hunt’ is a story of a rural tribal woman from India. Her name is Mary. She is harassed and stalked by a male logging contractor named Tehsildar who earlier came to her village to buy logging rights. He grows lustful of her. She resists his sexual advances. In an act of self-preservation later on, she turns predator and murders him.
In the beginning, Mary is a woman of strong physical abilities. She is also an astute businesswoman. Even the owner’s wife hails Mary as she says, “you have to take words from a girl who works like an animal, carries a forty-pound bag on her back, and boards the train, cleans the whole house in half an hour.” Mary also gets praises at the marketplace: “Mary has countless admirers at Tohri market. She gets down at the station like a queen.
She sits at her own rightful place at the market.” Mary is easy to like. She is able-bodied, empowered with strength, intelligent, humorous, generous, outspoken, and respected. She is also formidable with her words and machete, two weapons she clearly has.
One persistent admirer she has is the logging contractor Tehsildar. Towards the end of the story, Mary’s virginity is threatened in a potential rape. Mary rebukes the sexual advances with the first weapon she has: verbal threats. He still continues to follow her around. One day when she was returning from the market, “Tehsildar caught her hand. He says I won’t let go today.” Fortunately for her, she was able to escape Tehsildar’s more violent amorous advances. She hatches a plan that day. She decides to finally put an end to the man’s sexual aggression.
She sets up a rendezvous with Tehsildar in the forest during the annual spring festival. According to tribal custom, gender roles are reversed once every twelve years. The women become the hunters while the men dress up like clowns. The men also drink and sing in a festive merrymaking. This year is the twelfth year. Mary will become a hunter in this year’s

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    To begin, Mary Warren is initially a poor treated servant in the Proctor household who is very timid, demure and easily…

    • 893 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Mary Ann Cotton is known as a bad person. She had not only committed crimes but also had a hard life growing up which makes it realistic to how she became the person she is now. Her childhood and her having resentment towards men really tells why the way she is. There had been many family members that had died in her family as in her father while she was growing up. Soon later her mother had re-married which had led to bad conflicts with Mary.…

    • 1450 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    A passage from the book showing her bravery is read: Mary struck out, stamping on the man’s instep, using her elbows as weapons, twisting hard and fast out of his grasp. Hid face loomed indistinctly in the gray mist, and she attacked again, landing a hard punch on his nose. This passage is detecting her bravery when she is beating up the man who harassing her. If there was anyone else on her spot, she would simply ran away.…

    • 79 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Initially, Mary Anne embodies femininity with her vibrant personality, culottes, pink sweater, and cosmetic bag. However, as she spends more time at the compound, her priorities begin to change.…

    • 641 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Whilst Mary grew up poor she was well taught, her Father had attended prestigious schools in Scotland and Rome and made an effort to make sure his children were well educated - particularly in the Catholic faith. At the age of 16, Mary begun work as a store clerk, this was the beginning of her 'life' as the breadwinner of the family. As Mary was required to be a hard worker from an early age, she had a hardworking attitude instilled in her, this was to reflect in all of Mary's future works. Now aged 18, Mary was sent to be a governess for her aunt and uncle Cameron's children in Penola, South Australia. This was to mark the beginning of Mary's journey to her true vocation.…

    • 423 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Also, she is planning a huge, affordable grief retreat full of healing exercises and speakers. She truly believes God has given her a gift with words. More than likely people will come up to her crying after one of her speeches saying how much the speech impacted them. She continuously inspires people, including myself, which is one of The Great Eight traits heros tend to have (Cherry, “The Psychology of Heroism”). Ultimately, Mary has somehow turned such an awful event in her life into a positive outcome and now helps people overcome the same event.…

    • 1144 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    There was a young women name Mary. She had a vision for her life. But what happens to her takes her on a journey. The choices we make in life can better the future or leave it with a lot of pain as Mary finds out. It seems like Mary’s life was a rollercoaster ride at six flags, so many adjustments. Moreover, going through the pain, love, and success of finally being content within herself. In addition, enjoying the happiness that is put upon her, allowing God to direct her path in life to reach success. Believing that these steps were not motivated by her but it was the force of god.…

    • 112 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Yellow Mini

    • 966 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Mary- Mary is an awfully shy girl with a remarkable talent for playing the piano. She is somewhat pretty but lacks the confidence to show her inner and outer beauty to the world.…

    • 966 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    By including the struggles she encountered in her lifetime and the labor she did that white women did not experience, she tries to persuade her audience that black women might deserve equal rights to men more than the white woman. She uses facts and logic to persuade, and by deduction, she illustrates that women are not inferior to men. Truth uses effective appeals by pointing out that someone as significant and powerful as Jesus Christ was conceived and born without the involvement of a man. Mother Mary was a woman and she created the most influential man in history without a man. This shows that a woman can make consequential differences that a man could never make and it elevates her speech further. Truth’s illiteracy was an anchor to her credibility, but she did not let that keep her from speaking her opinion. She attempts to compel the audience and put each one of them in her shoes by briefly giving several examples of her unpleasant enslavement. For the effective use of pathos, she tells the audience that she gave birth to thirteen children and could on watch as each of them get sold off into slavery. This appealed to the parents who made up most of the audience. No one would want to watch their children be taken away for any reason, and the realization that it was inevitable for…

    • 805 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Mary Anne is portrayed as the best woman in the book. She is only seventeen and her high school sweetheart, Mark Fossie, arranges it so that she comes to stay with him for a while in Vietnam. When she first gets there she distracts the boys, which make them feel more at home. "The men genuinely liked her. Out on the volleyball court she wore cut-off blue jeans and a black swimsuit top, which the guys appreciated, and in the evenings she liked to dance to music from Rat's portable tape deck" (95). At first she is happy with mark, however over time she changes and it shows her becoming a woman and really maturing. "In her second week Eddie Diamond taught her how to disassemble an M-16, how the various parts worked, and from there it was a natural progression to learning how to use the weapon" (98). As the story goes on it shows that she is becoming more of a soldier. She in the end acted very differently than most women, this for women was a positive thing because it is giving her power, and a new look on life. This can be negative as well because Mark Fossie lost the girl he once loved. Her image continues to become more negative, once Mary Anne goes crazy and starts sleeping with the greenies. She becomes one of them when, she starts wearing tongue necklaces and listens to dark music. You just begin to see how she can't handle the war without going mad.…

    • 941 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Mary Warren

    • 798 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Arthur Miller Shows Mary Warren in different limelight’s of power. At the beginning of the play there is an aspect of her having no power but as you go through the play there seems to be shifts in her power. Miller uses Mary to demonstrate young, single women’s power and how when you have so much power it can just slip right out of your hands in one brief moment. Miller shows that power can be taken away pretty easily and quite absentmindedly from Mary Warren’s character. He demonstrates this by making her young and single and setting the scene to a subservient, naïve girl. This makes her prepared to answer and obey others unquestioningly and serving as a means to an end.…

    • 798 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    At the beginning of her stay, O’Brien portrays Mary Anne as a civilized and innocent girl by describing her physical and psychological characteristics. As Mary Anne makes her first appearance, O’Brien describes her as, “an attractive girl… [who has] terrific legs (p. 90)” suggesting that she is innocent has not experienced harsh conditions. O’Brien presents her as a sexual object in order to emphasize her innocence and unfamiliarity to war. Also, the description of her “bubbly personality” implies that she is only sees the positive in everyone which displays her naivety and innocence. O’Brien describes that Mary Anne “love[s] the thatched roofs and naked children, the wonderful simplicity of village life” implying that she is completely unaware of the hostile environment that she is in. Her unawareness and immaturity is shown because she is speaking positively about a place of violence and warfare. Towards the beginning of her stay with Mark Fossie and the rest of the crew members, Mary Anne is described as innocent and naïve. but as she continues to learn more about the war, and she begins to transform into a barbaric and…

    • 1068 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Mary is a fair lady, who does what she believes is right. Her name suggests religious allegory with Mary, the Mother of God, and human creation. Mary exhibits her Mother-like qualities at the birthday party, defending Mrs. Fullerton, the neighbour who "never [changes]," against the mothers who wear "nylons and skirts,"¦[their] hair fixed and faces applied." She knows that Mrs. Fullerton deserves a chance to stay in her home, as Mary, the Mother of God knows that all creation deserves a chance to live. Mary's fair personality conflicts with her neighbours' values and beliefs: while she is fair to human rights, the neighbours are fair to their community of "shinning houses." Although Mary is courageous in being the only person to defend Mrs. Fullerton, she is somewhat powerless with her arguments against her neighbours. Mary stands alone only listening to her neighbours speak with "self-assertion." She remains powerless with "no argument" to defend Mrs. Fullerton and her "barn." Outnumbered by "property-owners" who admire each other "as…

    • 479 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Mary begins to get hysterical by the girl's imitation of her. While it is obvious to the outside reader that the girls are only pretending, it truly affects the person that they are pretending to be. By only repeating exactly what Mary is saying, the girls affect her rational thought and…

    • 1406 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Hip Hop Satire

    • 1014 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Hip Hop is the great American paradox. A culture encompasses art, politics, and all things intertwined with urban life, and gives a platform for the populace of American poverty. Hip Hop is a blurred culture in the sense that it distinctly represents a social and ethnic class, and also indistinctly perceives a negative stereotype of these classes to a detached or unconcerned bystanders, that brandish Hip Hop as a dysphemism; an expression so substituted and contemptuous of themselves and to the greater society. The music video I will be discussing is from a 1990’s Hip Hop group named De La Soul, and the song is titled “Stakes is High”. The music video for this song illustrates Elijah Anderson analysis of inner city deism and examines the micro and macro circumstances that entail the philosophy of “The Code of the Streets”. This code that Anderson describes are the unwritten laws of urban neighborhoods—the norms that reflect the extensive social and economic complexities of many of the nation's inner-city urban inhabitants.…

    • 1014 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays