Friday, May 31, 2019

The Rape of Women in Draupadi, by Mahasweta Devi, and Open It,”by Saad

The Rape of Women in Draupadi, by Mahasweta Devi, and consecrate It, by Saadat Hasan MantoWhere on that point is war, there is the rape and abuse of women. From the Trojan War to the Middle East conflict, rape has been a tactic of war. Rape is commonly viewed by company as a symbol of female degradation, female submission, and the stripping of honor and humanity. In the stories Draupadi, by Mahasweta Devi, and Open It, by Saadat Hasan Manto, the rape of women is a common theme. In Mantos Open It, a young girl, Sakina, is raped by young men of her community, while in Devis Draupadi, a tribal rebel is raped by government of the state. While the storylines of these pieces are rather similar, the portrayal of the rape and the reactions of the young women are exceedingly different. Both authors use the disrobing of garments to create a dramatic climax. However, the respective climaxes bewilder contrasting ideas about the rape and degradation of women. In Draupadi, the unveiling of g arments reveals immense female power. In Open It, the disrobing of garments reveals helpless female submission. Despite these differences, however, both acts of disrobing yield in a striking male reaction and symbolize the remarkable survival of these battered and abused women. The circumstances of the rape and the personalities of the rape victims are precise different in Open It and Draupadi. In Mantos story, a father is desperately looking for his daughter, Sakina, in the midst of the chaos and disorder of Partition. He asks ego appointed social workers of the community to help him find Sakina. When Sakina is approached by these men, her initial reaction is one of fright The moment she heard the truck, she began to run (Manto 360). ... ...r remarkable survival. Although society will always have preconceptions of rape and how a woman should and will react to being raped, it is apparent through Draupadi and Open It that being raped is a very personal experience. It is an experi ence unique to women that lot yield very different reactions. Rape can make a woman, like it did Dopdi, or it can break a woman like it did Sakina. Because being raped is such a personal experience, a womans reaction to such a trauma should not and can not be judged. Whether a woman is strengthened or weakened through rape, it does not matter. What matters is that she survives.Works CitedDevi, Mahasweta. Draupadi. In opposite Worlds. Ed. Chakravorty Spriak. New York and London Routledge, 1987. Manto Hasan, Saadat. Open It. Stories about the Partition of India. Ed. Alok Bhalla. New Delhi Harper Collins, 1999.

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