Searching...
No suggestions found
Unable to load suggestions
Angaliyat tells the story of oppression and exclusion by transforming the vanquished into the victor, by turning the periphery into the core. The port ... rayal of Methi and Kanku as 'pure' women challenges the age-old perceptions of higher castes which denigrate the practice of remarriage among 'backward' communities. The stepchild who follows the mother to a new home holding her finger or angali, remains on the periphery of the stepfather's family. Significant from several points of view, the novel provides a view of the 'history from below'. Caught in external and internal forms of colonization, the community of weavers, the Vankars, is subject to oppression from the more powerful upper caste of the Patels.
You need to be logged in to recommend this book to others.
Loading book activity...
You need to be logged in to share your thoughts about this book.
You need to be logged in as an author to claim this book.
Joseph Macwan