A Comparative Study of Pecola and Gyanoda: Sex, Violence and Beauty in the Bluest Eye and Arakshaniya

2018 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 22-26
Author(s):  
Sajal Sarkar ◽  
Moshref Jahan

Saratchandra Chattopadhyay (1876-1938) in Arakshaniya (1916) has pictured Gyanoda, a socially abandoned and oppressed Bengali Hindu girl of 12/13 expected to be married off. Unable to endure the sexual violence and cruelties thrown upon her, Pecola in The Bluest Eye (1970) by Toni Morrison (b. 1931) looses her sanity. The colonial- society-constructed idea of beauty, the hurling insults of her schoolmates and neighbors, the perverted assurance of achieving beauty from the pedophile Soaphead Church and above all the sexual violence that she receives from her father leaves her in a dark world. Apart from her friends, she receives sympathy only from socially unaccepted ‘ruined’ women. Unlike Pecola, Gyanoda was restored to the world of love and affection primarily by her mother, younger aunt and then by Atul, her assumed love. Gyanoda, though rejected and humiliated by the family and the society, was not a total rejection as Pecola was. She managed to live on though not in a respected manner. This paper looks into Pecola’s psychic procedural patterns to show how she becomes an object of perversion and violence, which along with the established idea of beauty takes her to the verge of insanity. A comparative study has been done between Pecola and Gyanoda, two characters from two entirely different ethnicities and cultures. However, surprisingly both the characters encounter social hostility for their common characteristic “ugliness.” The very presumption of beauty, violence, and sex lead these young girls to the different worlds of their own. Black and female identities occupy very real political spaces of diaspora, dispossession and resistance. What is complicated is the simultaneity of suffering and power, marginalization and threat, submission and narcissism, which accre to Black and women’s bodies and their representation in racist cultures.--from “Feminism and the Colonial Body” by Kadiatu Kanneth.

2016 ◽  
Vol 6 (4) ◽  
pp. 70
Author(s):  
Lin Zhu

The thesis, employing parallel method in comparative literary study and an approach of feminism, conducts a comparison in the light of a lack of feminist consciousness and a hostile outlet of feminist consciousness in The Bluest Eye and Sula by Toni Morrison, an African American author, and Gate of Roses by Tie Ning, a Chinese contemporary author, which illustrates that an extreme feminist consciousness does damage to a healthy feminist consciousness.


2021 ◽  
pp. 194016122199409
Author(s):  
Olivier Standaert

This article describes and discusses how normative journalistic roles are formulated across Europe. The material was obtained from the 2012–2016 wave of the Worlds of Journalism Study, a comparative study designed to assess the state of journalism throughout the world. The advantage of this study over similar undertakings in the past is that we did not confront journalists with ready-made statements but invited them to tell us, in their own words, what they thought the major roles of journalists in their countries ought to be. Open responses of more than 10,200 journalists from twenty-seven European countries yielded 12,860 references. Results show that the most important roles refer to the domain of political life, especially the informational-instructive and the critical-monitorial functions—a finding that is consistent across the twenty-seven countries investigated. Beyond this shared global vision, it is, however, possible to point out some national specificities, keeping in mind that even if the core of the normative roles remains somewhat universal, a detailed comparison of those roles in their cultural context allows us to grasp some differences in their hierarchy and their meaning.


2017 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jamal Syarif

This article presents a comparative study of the socialization of values, norms and practices in various communities around the world. The materials of the study are obtained from the results of the socialization in the family in different countries. In most societies in the world, family holds a central position as the primary agent of socialization. Family has a significant role to prepare individuals in the early period of the development of its members. It is expected that family members have an active role in the community they live in. Values, norms and practices embedded in primary socialization are affected by family background involving ethnic, religion, culture and social strata.


Zootaxa ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 4810 (1) ◽  
pp. 81-109
Author(s):  
MARITES RAMOS-CASTRO ◽  
HONG-MING CHEN ◽  
BO-SYUN MAO

Taiwan is one of the richest in the world in terms of eel fauna. In this study, we examined the osteological and morphological characteristics of eels in the family Muraenidae. Furthermore, we focused on the neurocranium of 34 muraenid species in the genera Echidna (2), Enchelycore (3), Gymnomuraena (1), Gymnothorax (25), Scuticaria (1), Strophidon (1), and Uropterygius (1), which are caught in Taiwanese waters. This paper shows the results of a comparative study on osteological characters of the neurocranium including the ratio of nine length characters and 20 diagnostic characters for 34 eel species in the family Muraenidae. The subfamily Uropterygiinae is distinguished from the subfamily Muraeninae in having the lowest value on the depth of mid pre-orbit due to the termination of the ethmoidal crest toward premaxilla. Moreover, aside from Gymnomuraena zebra, the species of subfamily Uropterygiinae have the lowest orbit length. These results in neurocranial comparative morphology between the species are consistent with their previous classification based on molecular results. These morphological and osteological characters may be valuable for taxonomic purposes and might be used as the basis for further studies on the status of genera in Muraenidae. 


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