Maranottar Explained

Maranottar
Author:Suresh Joshi
Title Orig:મરણોત્તર
Orig Lang Code:gu
Country:India
Language:Gujarati
Genre:Lyrical novel
Pub Date:1973
Media Type:Print
Pages:71 pages
Dewey:891.473
Congress:PK1859.J593 M3
Preceded By:Chhinnapatra (1965)
External Url:https://ekatra.pressbooks.pub/marnottar/

Maranottar (Gujarati: મરણોત્તર; English: Posthumous) is a Gujarati novel by Suresh Joshi. It is written almost in the form of lyrical prose letter style.

Content

The novel is prefaced with five different quotations, one each from György Lukács,, Malcolm Lowry, W. H. Auden and Paul Valéry. The theme of death is presented in Lowry's quotation and the technique is suggested by Valery.

It has 45 short chapters in 71 printed pages. The chapters are built around the theme of approaching death, written with poetic imagery and ending with the poetic refrain of the name, 'Mrinal'. The novel is addressed to Mrinal, the lead female character, and some other characters like Sudhir, Gopi, Namita and Megha.[1] [2]

Joshi has used the techniques of an extraterrestrial narrator. The novel is narrated in first person.[3]

Criticism

It is considered as Joshi's prominent experimental novel.[4] However Ila Pathak wrote that, in Maranottar as well as in his another novel Chhinnapatra, the women characters appear only as the targets of men's lustful desires.[1] K. M. George considers it as an intended anti-novel which ended up only as an experiment difficult to read or comprehend.[5]

Translation

Maranottar has been translated into French as Temoignage Posthume by Sheela Karki and published in 2017.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: P. K. Rajan. The Growth of the Novel in India, 1950-1980. 31 January 2017. 1989. Abhinav Publications. New Delhi. 978-81-7017-259-8. 73-77.
  2. Book: Shirish Panchal

    . Śirīsha Pañcāla. Shirish Panchal. Suresh Joshi. 2004. Sahitya Akademi. New Delhi. 978-81-260-1922-9. 44.

  3. Book: Suresh Hariprasad Joshi. Tridip Suhrud. Tridip Suhrud. Crumpled letter. 31 January 2017. 1998. Macmillan India. 978-0-333-93188-2 .
  4. Book: Contemporary Gujarati Short Stories: An Anthology. 31 January 2017. 1 January 2000. Indian Publishers Distributors. 978-81-7341-129-8.
  5. Book: K. M. George. Modern Indian Literature, an Anthology: Surveys and poems. 1992. Sahitya Akademi. 978-81-7201-324-0. 141.