Anuradha Marwah-Roy, Idol Love. New Delhi: Ravi Dayal, 1999. 229 pages, Information only
available to me in Rupees at time of publishing, 190 (hardcover).
Reviewed by Uppinder Mehan, University of Houston-Victoria in South Asian Review vol. 31, No-1, 2010. 347-350
To call Idol
Love a novel of ideas is to overlook its more literary merits; to focus
only on its artistic elements is to minimize its insightful examination of an
important moment in contemporary Indian history that threatens to dominate all
other notions of India. Idol Love is Anuradha Marwah-Roy’s (now
Anuradha Marwah) second novel and is a sharp dystopia of the consequences of
India’s hard turn to Hindu fundamentalism in the 1990s.
The story is in three parts and covers a
span of roughly seven decades beginning with the suicide of a married woman
named Rajni. The love affair between
Rajni and a professor of Urdu literature, Riaz Ratnakar (a specialist in
Ghalib), becomes the pattern for other star-crossed lovers in the novel: a
different Rajni and a music teacher (Shyam born as Rashid Ahmad), and the
writer of the stories of the lovers and her publisher.
The novel is composed of complex layers of
thematic and formal elements. Formally
the novel structures itself as a writer’s meditation on the significant people
in her life as she constructs their stories from events that force themselves upon
her.
Thematically, the novel explores issues of
domestic violence, religious identity, the confluence of politics and religion,
the nexus of social circumstances and personal decisions, the function of art
and more. The sheer ambition of the
novel threatens to pull it apart into several directions, and there are
certainly some sections that are stronger than others, but the whole manages to
cohere without closing off further reflection at the end.
The first part of the novel could easily be
the entire novel of writers such as Anita Desai and Jumpha Lahiri (Desai’s Fasting, Feasting and Lahiri’s short
story collection The Interpreter of
Maladies both were also published in 1999).
Baumgartner’s Bombay (1988)
tackles some of the same issues surrounding the nation state and identity but
doesn’t touch fundamentalism. To be fair
to Desai the destruction of the Babri Masjid was still four years in the
future, but the currents of Hindutva fundamentalism were certainly flowing
strongly in the 1980s – the VHP and the RSS along with the Shiv Sena were
loudly proclaiming all manner of chauvinistic ideas. I realize I’m lumping together several
regional and national strains both within and without the various movements,
but my point is that India in the 1980s and 1990s was in a period of great
turbulence and many of the answers coming from the right promoted a much more
monolithic India. And, yes, the British
had constructed a monolithic colonial other Hindu India so that postcolonial
reconfigurations are to be expected, but there are a number of paths available
and there is no necessity for a monolithic self as a response.
The various female versions of Rajni and
the lover (Riaz, Om, Shyam) are purposely made multiple, I believe, partly in
response to the narrowing of circumstance and identity through an appeal to
religious fundamentalism.
The first Rajni comes to the un-named
writer character in the novel through her friend, Anita, who is concerned that
her husband, Riaz, may have contributed to Rajni’s suicide. Anita works in Atlanta as a computer
programmer while Riaz teaches Urdu language and literature in Ajmer and they
shuttle back and forth as their schedules allow. Their modern marriage is contrasted starkly
to the more traditional marriages of both Rajni and the writer. The relationships could form a continuum of
traditional to modern with Anita’s at one end and Rajni’s at the other;
although all the marriages are unhappy in their own ways, Rajni’s is the most
distressingly so. She is trapped in a
loveless marriage and her value is defined entirely in terms of the male
children she can produce. She has three
daughters, a drunk for a husband, and a mother-in-law who has climbed the
traditional family’s power structure quite successfully herself and is now
committed to making Rajni pay her dues fully in order to gain any recognition. Through pursuing a higher degree in history
Rajni clears a little space for herself but further alienates her family. Researching Gahlib’s response, Rajni comes
across Riaz Ratnakar whose bicultural name reflects his mixed Hindu/Muslim
family roots. The character of Riaz will
become Shyam in the part of the novel which is set in 2062 and will serve to reflect
both the forced erasure of history and an attempt to recover it. Marwah sets out the competing tensions and
historical parallels deftly and with some arresting images which is fitting
since a fair bit of the concern of the novel is with the process of the
reification of the self.
The love affair produces a rape (not by
Riaz), abandonment, an unwanted pregnancy, and finally Rajni’s suicide.
Two historical events propel the novel’s
present and set in play its future: the destruction of the Babri Masjid (1992)
from the purported birthplace of Ram in Ayodhya; the ‘miracle’ of the statues
of Indian deities ‘drinking’ milk (1995).
In the novel, the fundamentalists and Hindu chauvinists are able to use
the former to raze the area of Muslims and begin their virtual
disenfranchisement, and the latter to consolidate political power by resting
sovereignty not in the people but in religion.
The last part of the novel takes us into a
future in which Hindutva ideology has refashioned Indian society into a
tripartite structure with Ramins at the top, Dasas in the middle, and Drohis at
the bottom. The Ramins, have through the
political party of the Sadhoos have taken the old notion of Brahmin superiority
and combined it with the religious ideology that has turned Ram into
Poornaramin who is now seen as the original singular God who became the
trinity. Their future India is a
nostalgic return to the legislative framework of Manu supported by contemporary
technology. In this future the upper
caste men and women have recourse to all manner of surgical and assistive
reproductive technologies to turn them into the long-limbed, peaches-and-cream-skinned,
almost ephemeral beings of fundamentalist imaginary. The women are forced to select one of two
roles: the ardhangini or the sadhvi; that is, the Victorian
Madonna/whore/manager of the household or the professional business woman with
no other desires.
The Dasas are comprised of all the other
darker laboring castes and allowed to be servants to the Ramins. The most inferior group is the Drohis
(traitors) and these are all those who are considered unassimiliable and form
the exotic other of the Ramins. The
Drohis are composed almost entirely of Muslims who are “encouraged” to take on
Hindu names. The ghettoized Drohis are
forced to live in apartheid like conditions with passes required to visit and
work in Rajdhani (Delhi’s new name). Upward mobility for the Drohis consists in
becoming sanskritized enough to be inoffensive to the Ramins. And,
of course, in such a stratified society the most exciting taboo is love across
caste-class lines. The Rajni of this
future has a caring husband, and she is clearly an investment; however, she is
not measuring up, not socially, not physically, and not emotionally. Into her life comes the Drohi music teacher
Shyam as her Ustad Sahib. Shyam
immediately realizes the Bollywood film script that Rajni is following.
Earlier, I mentioned Desai and Lahiri, but
the most significant comparison to Marwar’s novel is Margaret Atwood’s dystopic
novel The Handmaid’s Tale in which a
fundamentalist Christian patriarchy has taken over large parts of North
America. Unlike Atwood’s future,
Marwar’s completely encloses its inhabitants; there is no outside except
sponsored emigration but the sense is that the rest of the world functions with
much the same structure. The novel does
end with two small signs of resistance and hope: the writer’s ability to create
alternative endings for the latest incarnation of Rajni, and the figure of
Maya.
Marwah does provide a reasonable framework
for understanding Maya’s motivations, but she is ideologically
transparent. It is Maya who serves,
ironically, to tear away the veils of consumerism and patriarchal domination
from her fellow slum dwellers. One would
expect more characters in a novel so rich with ideas to be one dimensional, but
the main characters are rounded and complex.
It is a testament to Marwah’s skill that in Idol Love we get fully realized characters who wrestle valiantly
and sometimes blindly to keep their futures open in an India that is becoming
more and more closed.
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