LS.1 HUNGER POEM
BY JAYANTA MAHAPATRA
(DEGREE I YEAR OU SYLLABUS)
INTRODUCTION:
Hunger
was written by JAYANTA MAHAPATRA. He is a translator and also edited
Chandrabhaga a literary magazine. His words collections include close
the sky, ten by ten, A rain of sites and temple. He won the Sahitya Academic
Award in 1981. His writing is closely related to his environment and relates
his personal desires and human relationships which explore the reality,
feelings and loop holes of the society.
CONTENT:
Jayanta Mahapatra’s poem “Hunger” depicts the miserable condition
of a fisherman whose daily routine is to catch fish which he did not satisfy
the basic needs for his family. The quest for the fulfillment of his family needs
lead to selling of his daughter. Thus, he opted unpleasant way of pimping of
his daughter to earn money.
Fisherman meets the
speaker near the bench where he draws a man to sell his daughter as he trails a
net to catch fish. He used all sorts of tricks on customers by telling them
about the beauty and freshness of his daughter. It showed wickedness and
carelessness of father and making his daughter as a commodity.
As the girl turned just fifteen made
her surrendered himself to her father wish and exhibits her obedience as she
was immature mentally. Thus she was compared to rubber for her flexible nature.
The speaker gratified his sexual
hunger with fisherman’s daughter. This perception on girl as an object indicates
that she was used numerously owing to malnutrition. At the end of the poem the
speaker said that for the first time he understood the real meaning of hunger
not owing to sexual gratification but which had driven by poverty. The feeling
of the empty stomach is compared with the fish which slither when it comes out.
CONCLUSION:
In this poem, poet
brings out that images of slink, claw and unsteady light, flickering a poor men
hurt which signify the exploitation of a poor girl for feeding themselves. This
poem presents two kinds of hunger one is flesh related and other is poverty
related.
Through this poem
Mahaptra exemplify the brutality of our society towards poor people. When agony
and suffering become intolerable, weak spirited poor people tend to surrendered
to inhumanity. The ethical and moral values have no place in such utterly
degraded human plight. These offences are spreading like wild fire in our
society.
Very nice. Thank You...
ReplyDeleteNice post.
ReplyDeleteToo good and thank you ..
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