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India: A Million Mutinies Now - V S Naipaul Reviews

DakNamTiltuMouthShut Verified Member
Kolkata India
A complete review after reading: India-VS Naipaul
Feb 25, 2023 10:09 AM 339 Views (via Android App)

The book:


India, written by VS Naipaul, is a compelling and thought-provoking book that provides a detailed exploration of the country's history, culture, and society. Naipaul, who was born in Trinidad and has Indian ancestry, brings a unique perspective to his examination of India, which he describes as a "wounded civilization."


This book is divided into several sections, each of which explores a different aspect of Indian life. Naipaul begins with a description of his own journey through India, providing vivid descriptions of the sights, sounds, and smells of the country. He then delves into the country's complex history, describing the various invasions, wars, and political upheavals that have shaped India's identity.


One of the strengths of the book is Naipaul's ability to provide a nuanced and detailed analysis of Indian society. He explores the caste system, which he describes as a "social disease, " and provides insight into the various religious and cultural traditions that coexist in the country. He also delves into the political landscape of India, describing the corruption and nepotism that is endemic in the country's political class.


However, while the book "India" is an insightful and engaging one to read, it is not without its flaws. One of the main criticisms of the book is that Naipaul's portrayal of India is overly negative and pessimistic. He focuses primarily on the country's flaws and shortcomings, and fails to acknowledge the positive aspects of Indian culture and society. Additionally, some readers have criticized Naipaul for perpetuating stereotypes about India and its people.


Another weakness of the book is Naipaul's tendency to generalize about Indian society. He often speaks in broad terms, making sweeping statements about the country and its people without providing concrete examples or evidence to support his claims. This can make his arguments seem simplistic and reductive.


Despite these flaws, India is a book that is well worth reading. Naipaul's insights into Indian society are often incisive and thought-provoking, and his writing is engaging and accessible. While his portrayal of India may be controversial, it is a valuable contribution to the ongoing discussion about the country's identity and future.


Naipaul come back in Global India
Apr 06, 2009 11:57 AM 1490 Views

I Read this book when I was working in a book shop at a five star Hotel. I think some time back


before this book has come; Naipaul received the Nobel Prize in Literature. So that was the time when Naipaul was quite popular in Media. From the cover page of this book you may guess what it


will be about. Most of the book is about the peoples .This book is not about the India but Indian People. Naipaul chose those people who are basically vulnerable and then Naipaul wants to open the layers of their upbringings, development, family, society and in hidden words Politics.


The book has been written in the interview from, and no doubt the style of writing these interview is good. Reader finds him self engage in narration. However at some places Naipaul become judgmental. You will see some very small details in this book that is rarity in modern literature


ex. the color paint on wall, postures, architecture of living rooms, eating habits. But are these really written for enriching the narration? I doubt not, Naipaul wants something to focus upon. He wants to focus on simple fact that Indian society, after so much of progress and development, is


at the same place where he has left it.


The core theme of the book is change. The book is a journey from "An area of Darkness" to Million


mutinies.


Suggestion - Before reading this book you should read the other titles of Author, Like Half a Life and Magic seeds .


Indian Culture 101
Jul 24, 2004 10:30 PM 6193 Views

It has been my goal over the past year to try to get the merest glimpse into Indian thought and culture. I've spent seven of the past eleven months in Mumbai, and next week am returning for another four months.


During this time, with the exception of a steady diet of Wodehouse, I've read virtually nothing except books on India: No Full Stops in India, by Mark Tully, The Elephant Paradigm and India Unbound, by Gurcharan Das, India: The Siege Within, by M.J. Akbar, The House of Blue Mangoes, by David Davidar, India's Struggle for Independence, by Bipan Chandra (an exceptionally difficult book for one who is unfamiliar with Indian history), several novels by Anita Desai, Goa and the Blue Mountains, by Richard F. Burton (an especially execrable example of the sheer ugliness of British colonial prejudices), and The God of Small Things by Arundhati Roy, to name a few of the 30-odd books I've devoured.


Perhaps it is time to admit defeat. How can a Westerner, working for a foreign company and staying in five-star hotels in Mumbai (itself only one tiny corner of India) expect to gain any understanding of the Indian mind? However, I'm not ready to throw in the towel just yet, and if I can't gain first-hand knowledge of Indian ways of thinking through experience, at least I can vicariously explore her highways and byways through literature. Two books by V.S. Naipaul, An Area of Darkness and India: A Million Mutinies Now have been invaluable aids to the quest for India.


I know that Naipaul isn't a popular figure among Indians. His criticisms seem overly harsh, and he is very spare in his praise of any aspect of Indian society. A descendant of Indian laborers and merchants who settled in Trinidad, he has a basic knowledge of some of the ways of Indian society and religion, and speaks the language (well, Hindi, at least), so his travels in India do have a good deal of value for the uninitiated.


However, one of the chief criticisms of his writings is that he brashly makes sweeping judgments of Indian society from the posture of an Indian native, when it is clear that his cultural sensibility is no more Indian than mine is British--my ancestors came to the U.S. many decades ago from England, but to use that as a platform from which to judge British society would be presumptious in the extreme. Naipaul rarely finds much that is good or noble in the Indian character, and often betrays a very First World irritation towards the decayed infrastructures and idiosyncrasies he finds in his travels.


However, if the reader is willing to take Naipaul's opinions with a very large grain of salt, much can be learned from his writings. It is clear to Naipaul from the outset that India is not just one culture, but a country made up of hundreds, if not thousands, of widely divergent cultures. Knowing this, Naipaul's modus operandi is to spend a great deal of time with a few select individuals from differing cultures and locations, and attempt to extrapolate universals about all of India from their thought and behavior.


The ''million mutinies'' of the title are the countless ways by which the various Indians Naipaul profiles have departed from either the status quo imposed by generations of British rule or the traditions dictated by culture, caste, and religion. Among his profiles are Papu, a successful Jain trader and Anwar, a Muslim from Mohammed Ali Road in Bombay; Rajan, a displaced Brahmin in Calcutta; Kala, a Tamil woman who has thrown off the chains of tradition; Dipanjan, a West Bengali science professor; Rashid, a Shia Muslim in Lucknow; and Gurtej Singh, a Sikh in Chandigarh. He ends the journey in Srinagar, at the hotel on the lake from which he wrote An Area of Darkness.


For one who has only limited knowledge of Indian history and culture, Naipaul's books are informative. He has a classic journalistic style: Naipaul will generally open each section with a brief background of the event he is about to incarnate for the reader--the Periyar Dravidian movement in Tamil Nadu, the devastating effects of Partition on Calcutta and Lucknow, the influence of Dr. Ambedkar among Dalits, the Sikh uprisings in Amritsar--and then let his leading characters speak without much comment by the writer. It is an effective strategy: the reader feels (perhaps inaccurately) that s/he has gained some knowledge of India's troubled history, while also feeling the results of these events upon individual lives.


I cannot begin to know whether Naipaul's examinations of Indian life are correct--after all, my entire experience of Indian personalities is based upon the few people I know, MBA's who live in places like Bandra, Juhu, and Churchgate--but whether it is because of the tricks of the accomplished stylist, or because the observations are in fact accurate, the stories and events recounted in the book have the ring of truth. One problem with the book (by no fault of its own) is that, even though it was only written 16 years ago, it already seems terribly dated. Again, I have no way of knowing, but it seems that India has changed more in the past decade than in any time since Partition.


Still, despite its faults, India: A Million Mutinies Now is an excellent starting point for the novice who wants a crash course in recent Indian history and culture. The reader just needs to remind himself that Naipaul's views are not the whole story, and if he wants to celebrate the glories and beauties of India, he will have to look elsewhere.


Note to Mouthshut.com readers: If you have any recommendations for further reading along these lines, please pass them along. I'm looking for authors that are good at providing a realistic view of India, where she's at and where she's been, either fiction or nonfiction. I realize I've just scratched the surface, and am seeking to dig a little deeper.


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