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Hlavní autoři: Kumar, Ravindra, Bansal, Anupam
Médium: Recurso digital
Jazyk:angličtina
Vydáno: Zenodo 2026
Témata:
On-line přístup:https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19665610
Tagy: Přidat tag
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  • <p class="MsoNormal"><span>In a postcolonial and psychological setting, this research paper discourses the intricate play of trauma, identity, and bureaucracy in the book, English, August: An Indian Story by Upamanyu Chatterjee, written on a postcolonial and psychological platform.</span><span> </span><span>The omnipresence of bureaucratic, cultural and existential trauma is explored through the lens and heart of the main character, Agastya Sen. The alienation, ennui, and identity crisis that the novelist labyrinths in the postcolonial Indian bureaucracy are expressed through the emotions of the protagonist. This kind of exploration is purely aimed at unleashing the trauma psychic wounds, which the people inherited during the colonial rule. As we see in the novel, trauma is not a personal disease. It is a structural ailment entrenched in the social and institutional systems. The gist of the novel is the divided consciousness of Agastya, where the novelist is indicting the bureaucratic machine as an item and a generator of trauma. More than this, it exposes its moral paralysis and alienating influence. In addition, it reveals the familial disconnection, cultural mimicry, and the clash between Western modernity and Indian tradition that unitedly intensify Agastya’s psychological dislocation. The study suggests that, in this novel, the novelist has transformed personal suffering into a metaphor for collective postcolonial anxiety with the aim of mirroring a nation's moral and existential crisis that causes bureaucratic stagnation. The traumas, whether it is moral or societal in the novel, serve as a powerful tool. They critique postcolonial identity formation and bureaucratic modernity, revealing how inherited systems of power shape emotional and cultural life in today’s India.</span></p>