Friday, 27 July 2018
Book Review : 'Mother Pious Lady - Making Sense of Everyday India', by Santosh Desai.
"Even more mystifying is ‘Mother Pious
Lady’,
a description that is perhaps meant to connote a Mother-in-law concerned more with
burning incense sticks than daughter-in-laws".
"We are like this only. …the Disclaimer
Indica - forgive us , we are Indian and sometimes we behave in ways that would
seem very strange to you.
But there is an implicit logic, or at least some sort
of explanation that might render these Indianisms more comprehensible".
***
“Balancing responsibility with indulgence, the need for external display and internal comfort, the family and self, anxieties and aspirations, desires and duties, self-respect and pragmatism, these were all quests of an un-heroic everyday kind that made the Indian middle class what it was.”
***
I’m not a great fan of non-fiction but this
one seemed to touch some nostalgic nerves when I flipped through random pages.
I finally picked it up because it seemed to resonate with many interesting
experiences of an average Indian’s daily life.
I must admit it took a long time for me to finish reading this book. I finished reading three other
fictional novels before I finally decided to finish Mother Pious lady and I
did, on the 5th of July 2018, a full two months after I got hold of it, with immense relief. This by no means
indicates a decline in the quality of the book, although I do concede that it does get boring, somewhere along the way.
In fact, the book is a refreshing change
from many other books about India that one gets to read. However, unlike the
preachy or condescending reads that one might expect, this one just states
random everyday facts as they are, just as one might perceive them.
The book reminds me of the Bollywood movie PK, in the
sense that it brings to our notice everyday stuff that we are so accustomed to,
that we fail to observe or try to make sense of them. We are so immersed in the
fabric of society that we complain, rant and finally accept that this is the
way things are. This is how we are. However, Mr. Desai goes a little further, when he tries to analyze and make sense of why we are the way we are. And perhaps he isn’t
too far off in his analysis, although one may not agree with all of them.
The convenience of reading this book cannot
be undermined. The book is divided into small chapters, each dealing with a new
topic. This allows readers to pick it up and catch up on reading it, even if
they only have five minutes to spare. Like reading short stores, one can finish
one chapter within a few minutes, and mull over one particular topic of the
great Indian social landscape.
The initial chapters are interesting. As
the book progresses however, the ones in the middle are rather boring, because
they fall into a repetitive mode.
The best feature of the book is the sheer variety it offers. From street food to shared clothes, politics to movies, postcards to holidays, commodes to kites, family quirks to technology. It discusses most forgotten aspects of Indian society that has been subjected to change or undergoing evolution.
The whole book maintains a breezy tone and touches on even the most controversial topics in a cleverly presented, non-accusatory, almost matter-of-fact observatory mode.
Mr.Desai exhibits a profound understanding of the Indian psyche, finds convincing 'reasons' for most deep-rooted customary Indian quirks and presents them in a dry humor mode .
Overall a good book, especially for the
middle aged populace of the country, or even the younger generation of readers
who would identify with some situations they've heard being recounted by their
parents and grandparents. Or for the non-Indians of the world, who cannot figure us out and attempt to decipher why Indians are the way they are.
***
Excerpts:
Most of u have grown up wearing clothes
that wre two sizes too large till we ‘grew into them’.
The fear of separation from one’s roots
runs deep in our way of life.
Our luggage was the tangible manifestation
of ourselves, our anchor in the sea of turbulent strangeness…
We never travel alone – we ravel with our
entire way of life…the great Indian Journey
At a deeper level there is something about
the form of paper and ink that creates a feeling of personal intimacy.
The irony of course, is that property
disputes grew at a time when the dominant theme was one of seamless sharing.
As we move into a time when affluence is a
promise than a legacy, perhaps we will see fewer disputes of this kind.
Looking back one is struck by how little
materiel was used in creating such a rich and satisfying experience.
The Indian mother has changed. How she get
represented in cinema has changed.
‘Mere paas ma hai.’ Four words that
established what really mattered, what could not be bought or achieved , merely
earned.
In more than a few ways Indian society has
conspired to make the woman most comfortable in her role as mother. As a mother
she faced no censure and no limits.
The mother's role was to turn her little
girl into a knowing woman as soon as possible and to keep her son a little boy for the rest of
his life.
The window of yesterday has been replaced
by the TV of today.
Technology individualizes us by offering us
the ability to stay connected on our terms.