Sunday, February 27, 2011

In The God of Small Things, discuss Velutha's character in detail.

One of the major issues that is presented in this
excellent novel is that of caste and social stratification. Velutha is an "untouchable,"
a Dalit who occupies the lowest social stratum of Indian society. Velutha lives with his
father,Vallya Paapen, and his crippled and paralysed brother, Kuttappen, in a little hut
downriver from Rahel and Estha's house. Velutha is great friends with the children,
although this is officially prohibited.


It was when Velutha
was a child that Mammachi noticed Velutha's skill with his hands, and thus persuaded
Velutha's father to send him to a special school for the untouchables. This education
had the impact of making him not "safe" as an adult. As his father reflects, what
Velutha has as an adult is a kind of self-assurance that "could be construed as
insolence" in a touchable. He works in the pickle factory and has skill both with
machines and with wood. He is also involved in the Communist party. It is clear that his
position as untouchable does not sit easily with
him


However, his real involvement comes when he becomes
involved in an affair with Ammu, which transgresses the "love laws" that the novel
repeatedly mentions. This leads him to being blamed for the rape and murder of Sophie
Mol, even though he had nothing to do with it, and his cruel treatment at the hands of
the police. It is this event, and Estha and Rahel's complicity with it, that haunts the
two twins so strongly and creates the central tension of the novel as they try to come
to terms with what happened and their role in it.

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