Dr. Dhananjoy Roy
Introduction
Since its earliest days, the city has always been considered as, to quote Raymond Williams, “an achieved centre: of learning, communication, light” (Raymond Williams, 1) and of culture and employment as well. There can hardly be any controversy to this view. But there is another important factor that the cities have always been problematic too; starting from the aboriginal cities that were established on the alluvial plains of the Near East in the Neolithic period through the Mesopotamian cities, or the cities of the Harappa civilization to the post-industrial cities of the 19th and the 20th centuries, and even to the ultra modern cities of the present digital era, the cities have always been found problematic. Therefore, what Burton Pike, in the ‘Preface’ of his mammoth work, The Image of the City in Modern Literature (1981), has spoken of any Western city only: “The city in Western culture has always been problematic” (Pike, 1), is equally true to all even an eastern city like Calcutta. And nowhere in literature than in the novels of Indian Diaspora, especially those which are written on and about the city of Calcutta and its people, this image of problematic city has been portrayed so much realistically. Among the city novels written by the writers of Indian Diaspora on different themes related directly or indirectly to the city of Calcutta, Amit Chaudhuri’s two novels viz. A Strange and Sublime Address (1991) and Freedom Song (1998) do have a special focus on some of the leading problematic aspects of the present day city of Calcutta. The present paper, therefore, proposes to single out and critically examine some of the major problematic aspects of the city of Calcutta that are represented by Amit Chaudhuri in these two novels.
In A Strange and Sublime Address:
Amit Chaudhuri’s first novel, A Strange and Sublime Address (1991) is about the two summer vacations enjoyed by a Bombay (now Mumbai) based young boy named Sandeep at his Chhotomama’s (maternal uncle’s) house in the southern part of Calcutta. Though the plot of this novel like many of Chaudhuri’s other novels and stories, is not of any particular essence, its representation of some of the images of the hazards of urbanity in the contemporary city of Calcutta (Kolkata) is an extremely vivid one. There are, for instance, evocative images of Calcutta as a city of dust, as a city of intolerable traffic jams, as a city of frequent power cuts and the others.
A City of Dust:
Chaudhuri views the city of Calcutta, in this novel, as “a city of dust” (Chaudhuri, 11). He reflects in his text how the dirty granular particles of dust which are present in the air of the city gradually engulf the whole of the metropolis:
If one walks down street, one sees mounds of dusts like sand- dunes on the pavements, on which children and dogs sit doing nothing, while sweating labourers dig into the macadam with spades and drills (Chaudhuri, 11).
Chaudhuri further writes of how the power of dust slowly transforms the city: Trenches and mounds of dust everywhere give the city a strange bombed-out look. The old houses, with their reposeful walls, are crumbling to slow dust, their once-gleaming gates are rusting. Dust flakes off the ceilings in offices; the buildings are becoming dust, the roads are becoming dust. At the same time, dust is constantly raised into startling new shapes and unexpected forms by the arbitrary workings of the wind, forms on which dogs and children sit doing nothing (Chaudhuri, 11).
There is a strange poetry in the movement of the dust, and Chaudhuri himself waxes eloquent when he speaks about the city ‘disintegrating into’ and ‘rising from’ dust like that mythological bird, the Phoenix:
Daily, Calcutta disintegrates, unwhispering, into dust, and daily it rises from dust again (Chaudhuri, 11).
To get rid of all this dust daily, a household in Calcutta needs floors to be
swept and household goods cleaned at least twice in a day once in the
morning and again in the evening. It is because of this that the family of Sandeep’s Chhotomama in the novel employs two maidservants, Saraswati who polishes the floor with a moist rag in the morning, and Chhaya who cleans the house for the second time in the evening. Besides, Sandeep’s Chhotomamima (maternal aunt) “religiously” (Chaudhuri, 11) dusts the furniture of their household daily. The author’s description of the dust in the houses of the city sometimes seems almost fabulous to the reader:
She [Chhaya] would sweep the floor unending expenses,
acres and acres of floor with a short broom called the
jhadu, swiping away the dust in an arc with its long tail, which reminded one of the drooping tail of some nameless, exotic bird (Chaudhuri, 12).
Chaudhuri’s repetitive use of the image of ‘dust’ in the text is in one way indicative of the atmospheric dirtiness present in the city of Calcutta. The term ‘atmospheric dirtiness’ means “the overall soiling capacity of the air: it indicates the total degree of pollution,” as Dipankar Chakraborty in his essay “Calcutta Environment” has defined it. The dirty granular particles of dust, nevertheless, cause many heinous diseases including respiratory diseases. The
author’s repetitive use of the image of dust in this novel, no doubt, has a witty concern to this.
In Chapter 2 of this novel, again, the novelist, while writing about the dilapidated roads and the streets of Calcutta, which are always, as he observes, “being dug up” either for the ongoing construction of “the underground [metro] railway system [of 1984]” (Chaudhuri, 11) or for some works like the replacement of underground pipes, reiterates the image and considers the city of Calcutta as full with “mounds of dust.”
A City of Traffic-Jams:
Calcutta as ‘the city of traffic-jams’ is also a prominent image recurrently appears in A Strange and Sublime Address. The predicament of traffic jams is one of the many features that typify the city of Kolkata. It is due to traffic jams that the flow of vehicles in many streets of the city often turns to a state of complete standstill. Historically speaking, traffic-jams have always plagued the city of Calcutta, particularly since the 1930s. Jagannath Chattopadhyay, in an article “Howrah Bridge: Akhon o Takhon” (“Howrah Bridge: Now and Then”) published in the Sunday special supplement “Rabibar” in the Bengali daily Bartamaan (Calcutta, July 03, 2005), records
how the movement of traffic on the Pontoon Bridge the old Howrah Bridge
was always impeded by huge traffic jams created mostly by the carts and hand carts that crossed to and from the city of Calcutta during the 30s and 40s of the 20th century. Chattopadhyay also tells in his essay that these huge traffic jams were one of the major causes behind the erection of the new Howrah Bridge or Rabindra Setu (1943) over the river Hooghly. Sukanta Chaudhuri, in his essay “Traffic and Transport in Calcutta,” (1990) speaks much about the traffic-jams of Calcutta and also mentions a number of causes that create tedious traffic-jams in the city. Some of these are: limited road-space in the city of Calcutta (only 6.5% of the total area of the city is devoted to roads); shortage in the number of bridges over the river Hooghly to connect the city with rest of the country; an abundance of slow vehicles like hand carts, rickshaws (including hand rickshaws), push vans and other small vehicles; shortage of one-way roads in the city; an acute shortage of parking spaces in the city which compels people to park their vehicles on the streets or roads; an excess of street hawkers or footpath venders whose “stalls tend to cluster at road junction” (Sukanta Chaudhuri, 149); and voluminous pedestrian traffic that stops the normal flow of the traffic every now and then. Really, the list is almost endless!
In A Strange and Sublime Address, Amit Chaudhuri too reflects upon this perpetual problematic of traffic-jams in the city of Calcutta and refers to this at several places in the text. For instance, we are told how Sandeep in the novel is accustomed to hear the blowing of horns in the first traffic-jam of the evening in the road near Chhotomama’s house in the city:
He [Sandeep] heard car-horns blowing in the distance. He
heard shouts a taxi driver must be insulting a bus driver. It
was the first traffic jam of the evening, punctual, ceremonial and glorious (Chaudhuri, 80-81).
Chaudhuri’s use of the adjectives ‘punctual’, ‘ceremonial’, and ‘glorious’ for “the first traffic jam of the evening” is an instance of a mellowed irony. As a Calcuttan, Chaudhuri seems to smile along with the inconveniences caused by traffic jams in the city. Thus when the traffic resumes its flow and everything becomes normal again, the author implies that not only the flow of the traffic but also the flow of the natural world had been halted, and that life comes back to the city with the cleaning of the jam:
The two hours of golden stillness has ended. The cars and the crowded buses were on the roads again; Abhi and Babla [The two cousin brothers of Sandeep] would come back home from school [for their school bus might have been halted in the traffic jam]; pigeons flapped their wings and rose above rooftops, a clean universe of rooftops and terraces (Chaudhuri, 81).
Of course traffic-jams in the streets of Calcutta sometimes do have their serious consequences too. The novel shows how Sandeep’s Chhotomama, who already had had a heart attack, suffered another attack in the car itself, because the car by which Chhotomama had been taken to the hospital for immediate treatment was caught in a traffic-jam:
On the way to the hospital, Chhotomama had another attack. He vomited on the floor of the company car [the car of the company where Sandeep’s father worked]. The driver, caught in a traffic jam, shook his head from side to side. He [the driver] had seen these things happen to his elder brother, who had died in half an hour (Chaudhuri, 93).
This is a very common and appalling phenomenon that the city of Calcutta witnesses almost every day.
A City of Frequent Power-Cuts:
Frequent and uncertain power-cut, another major problematic aspect of urban life in Calcutta, has also a vivid representation in A Strange and Sublime Address. The author, in the novel, gives as much as five references to the intolerable frequent power-cuts of Calcutta which no doubt exemplify unwanted and tedious disruption in the flow of the common urban life in the city. The first reference, as for instance, is made in Chapter 4 of the novel when we are given a picture of Chhotomama’s household on an “unbearably hot” (Chaudhuri, 25) afternoon while all the members of the family are striving hard to beat the heat which is doubled by a sudden power cut:
They [the members of Chhotomama’s family including Sandeep and his mother] had shut all the windows and closed the shutters so that the room was a large box covered by a lid,
cool and dark and spacious inside. And they were like tiny insects living in the darkness of the box, . . . whenever there was a power-cut, they fanned themselves meditatively with newspapers or bamboo fans, and the children deserted the bed and lay down or sat down on the floor, because the floor was a stone slab of coolness, an expanse of warm ice that would not melt. Sandeep’s aunt and mother lay on the bed, murmuring to each other, and each time they turned, there was a shy and subtle clink of bangles. And whenever the power returned, the fan whirred at full speed, and the silent room filled with its gentle, understated hum (Chaudhuri, 26).
The author’s detailed observation of every particular thing and movement of the people in the house is certainly noteworthy and his use of the oxymoron ‘warm ice’ is striking enough.
There is a second reference to a power-cut in Chapter 7 of the novel. It was at six o’clock on a Sunday evening when the power was suddenly cut, and this led to the utter disappointment of “the two servant–girls and their little brother who had come downstairs and plopped shyly on the floor to watch the Sunday film on television . . .” (Chaudhuri, 47). When they turned back home disappointedly, Sandeep’s mother comforted them with an assurance: “I’m sure they’ll [the television broadcasting centre] show us a better film next Sunday . . .” (Chaudhuri, 47). The third reference to frequent load shedding in the city is akin to an extended metaphor. On one evening of a power cut, Chhotomama took the three children, Sandeep, Abhi and Babla to a nearby field –– a big “maidan” (Chaudhuri, 49) which was fully engulfed in darkness but also full with all sorts of people, “college boys, schoolboys, couples, unemployed men, families, hawkers, groups of girls” (Chaudhuri, 49). The author’s description of this scene in the novel is extremely evocative:
As they [Chhotomama and the three children] came closer, they noticed that the field was full of people whom they had not been able to discern at first in the darkness: now they came slowly into focus in the moonlight, like a negative becoming clearer and clearer as it was developed in a darkroom. . . It was a strange scene because in spite of the number of people who had congregated together, there was scarcely any noise. The shadowiness of the place made them speak in low voices, as if they were in a theatre or auditorium where the lights had been dimmed meaningfully, and a film or a play were just about to begin (Chaudhuri, 49).
The irritating reality of power-cuts in the city of Calcutta is made something beautiful here. It is as if the evening power-cut in Kolkata has a conjuring power to draw all the people of the city from their houses to a moonlit-maidan for an evening walk, casual interaction and generous adda (gossip). The maidan here is almost an epitome of the whole city of Calcutta completely
transformed by the magic spell of an evening power-cut. And Chaudhuri perceptively adds that:
If there had been no power-cut, or if it had still been light, the maidan, needless to say, would have throbbed with its own din and activity (Chaudhuri, 49).
The novelist also gives a hint of the magic spells that an evening power-cut casts over the people of Calcutta when he says:
But the darkness had brought a strange lethargy and even peace to these otherwise highly strung men and women, and there was a perceptible sense of release, as if time was oozing by, and the world happening elsewhere (Chaudhuri, 49).
Poetic reflection apart, the author, however, is often critical of the government for the frequent and tedious power-cuts in the city. This he denotes through an incident that happens in Chapter 12 of the novel. It was around eleven thirty in one morning when Sandeep’s Chhotomama had a heart attack even as he “was planning to take a late bus to work” (Chaudhuri, 90). When the other members of the family were trying to give him relief before taking him to the hospital, “There was a [sudden] power-cut”, which made the patient’s condition more critical. Sandeep’s mother went on constantly fanning “her brother with a newspaper” (Chaudhuri, 91), but the situation became so insufferable that they all began to criticize the government “for its inability to rectify the power shortage” (Chaudhuri, 91) in the city. Historically, it was on 30th May 1899, that is over one hundred and twelve years back from today, that electricity began to be supplied for domestic consumption in the city of Calcutta (Cathcal.com, May, 2008). That a period of a century and a decade is not sufficient for a developing metropolis like Calcutta to meet the requirement of power is a sad reflection of our capabilities. That this is a haunting issue for Chaudhuri is revealed in the last chapter of the novel which is entitled “Coolness,” which begins with the words: “THE POWER-CUT had begun at seven in the morning. Now it was twelve” (Chaudhuri, 173). The author’s use of capital letters in the words, “THE POWER-CUT” denotes his virtual protest against the nonchalant attitude of the authority towards this problematic issue of the city. It is true that in almost every reference to power- cut in the novel, the author more or less tries to romanticize the situation, but here he clearly indicates that he has a serious apprehension too for this problem.
Drooping Condition of the Calcutta Telephones:
Amit Chaudhuri’s observation on the indescribably poor condition of the telecommunication department in the city of Calcutta especially during the 80s and 90s of the last century has also been very critically represented in A Strange and Sublime Address. Since its birth, telecommunication, however, has been a vital landmark in the development of human civilization especially the urban civilization. In fact, Telecommunication and Information and
Technology are the two departments which have reached to such a height of development today that one can hardly think of any existence in the present world without receiving any help from these two benefactors. This is important to note too that the city, at the same time, also plays an immense role in properly bringing about man’s exceeding development in these two major areas of human civilization. In fact, one is the supplement for the development of the other. Quite naturally, Calcutta as a city must have such a place of pride. But, unfortunately enough, Chaudhuri’s A Strange and Sublime Address gives us a different image; here Chaudhuri has represented the very worse condition of the telephones and the telephone department in Calcutta during the 80s and 90s of the last century. He has called the Calcutta Telephones as a “creature” (Chaudhuri, 169), and commented that “A telephone in Calcutta is quite useless” (Chaudhuri, 169). The author very eloquently refers to the age-old comic artist, “Charlie Chaplin eating a shoe with great relish in The Gold Rush” and he wonders “what Chaplin would have done with this telephone [of Calcutta]” (Chaudhuri, 169). This perception of the author is no doubt highly witty and satiric. However, the condition of the Calcutta Telephones has gradually become much more praiseworthy in the later decades.
In Freedom Song:
Somewhat like A Strange and Sublime Address, Amit Chaudhuri’s Freedom Song (1998), also tells the story of two middle-class families in the city of Calcutta –– one of Khuku Biswas and the other of Mini (Supriti Biswas). The novel describes how the members of an ordinary middle class Bengali family, though somehow radical in mind and heart, residing in a city like Calcutta, manages to marry off a troublesome young lad named Bhaskar. This telling is intermingled with details of the friendship of Khuku and Mini along with their respective families. But here also Chaudhuri has done well with the photographic detailing of the minutiae with special reference to the troubles of urbanity in the modern city of Calcutta. And, interestingly enough, Chaudhuri here in this novel has dealt with a cluster of those problematic aspects of urbanity in Calcutta that he has not represented in the earlier novel.
Problem of Generation-Gap:
Images of radical changes in life style, education, culture and the language of daily conversations of the new generations of Calcuttans are reflected upon in Chaudhuri’s depiction of Calcutta in this novel. A clear difference in the culture and the life style between two different generations of people –– the old and the new –– can be noted in Bhola and his children, Bhasker, Manik, and Piyu in this text.
Differences between the two generations can be found in their distinct ways of regarding the city of Calcutta as a place to live in. We are told by the author that old people are content to stay in the city till their last breath, while
the young ones are anxious to leave the city for one cause or the other. Thus has Khuku’s son, Bablu gone to America (California) to complete his research in Economics, while Bhasker’s second son and Bhola’s brother, Manik has gone to Germany to obtain his graduation degree from there. And the author anticipates that he (Manik) will never return to Calcutta because:
Recently he’d written from Germany that he wanted to study management in America once he’d graduated . . . (Chaudhuri, 400).
On the other hand, the older generation returns back to the city after retirement. Khuku, Bhola’s sister, thus returns to Calcutta from Shillong with her husband, Shib after his retirement. “The young leave this city if they can;” she says, “the old, it seems return to it . . .” (Chaudhuri, 453). Moreover, Khuku also anticipates that Mohit, her late elder sister’s grandchild, will also leave Calcutta within two years for America:
But he would not be here long. Little did he know that two years from now he would be in America. Around him, the city decayed … It would give way to a brief adolescence and then he would be gone to America, where his uncle [Manik] was. Before long he’d sit for his Scholastic Aptitude Test (Chaudhuri, 360).
Contrarily, Bhasker’s father, Bhola, “a German-trained engineer” (Chaudhuri,
402) has a special fascination for the city of Calcutta. The author’s extent about Bhola’s love for Calcutta is noteworthy:
Her husband loved this city [Calcutta]. He loved its fish, rui and katla and koi [different varieties of fish] with black oily scales, and during the monsoons he would cry out a truism that he repeated with great ardour at this time every year: ‘Ilish is the king of fishes!’. . . Thirty years ago, he had come to this city and got married. Since then, its air had changed, till now a nimbus of smoke and dust and fumes surrounded it always. But he loved it as one who had come here and made his life here. Here he had launched his small business, here he had had his children, Bhasker, Manik and Piyu; . . . and in them, in the way they spoke and in what they spoke of, he saw Calcutta more truly than himself; they were the children of this city (Chaudhuri, 325).
But this vision of the city of Calcutta in Bhola’s eyes is however shattered: But three children had become ghosts as three children had grown up, and only he [Bhola himself], it seemed, had remained the same. Who was he? Time and Calcutta seemed to pass through him like water (Chaudhuri, 325).
It is for this reason that he feels depressed. Immigration from a city like Calcutta to other places including foreign countries for some specific purposes is an important and well debated issue that appears as an iterating image
especially in the novels of Indian Diaspora written in English. Kunal Basu’s The Opium Clerk, Amitav Ghosh’s The Shadow Lines and The Calcutta Chromosome and Anita Desai’s Voices in the City are a few among the others where this image has appeared very prominently.
Differences between the two generations, however, can also be found in their common life style. When the aged Bhola, who puts great faith on everything that is old and traditional, turns the knobs of their old radio to catch an audible radio station to hear the news of the day, his two children, Bhaskar and Piyu watch an English movie on the television:
. . . while Bhasker and Piyu watched the English film on television downstairs Bhasker’s father turned the knobs for the medium and short wave on the radio –– to listen who knows what –– . . . (Chaudhuri, 323).
The act of watching a film by the young when compared to an old man’s inquisitiveness about the news of the day, indicates an essential difference between the two generations.
A Mirage and A Nightmare:
The image of newness of Calcutta has had a fine reflection in Chaudhuri’s Freedom Song. But the icon of newness of Calcutta also leads the novelist to describe the city as a “mirage” (Chaudhuri, 336) and a nightmare. While giving the minutiae of a nursing home at Dhakuria in South Calcutta, where Khuku and Mini, the two childhood friends go twice a week for their routine physical checkup in their old age, Chaudhuri comments:
Because the building itself was new, with a flat white façade that had red borders, it looked like a mirage, as all new things do in Calcutta. (Chaudhuri, 336)
He repeats this when he describes how Khuku and Mini reach the building after passing through the glaring streets and lanes of the city in Khuku’s family car: “The nursing home rose before them like a mirage” (Chaudhuri, 337). ‘A mirage,’ according to the Oxford Dictionary and Thesaurus, is an “optical illusion caused by atmospheric conditions . . .” (Oxford Dictionary and Thesaurus, 476). A mirage appears to have an existence particularly when it is observed from a certain distance. And so when Chaudhuri says that whatever is new in Calcutta is like “a mirage,” he implies that all the new things in the city, are without any real substance, solidity or permanence that may lead one to nothingness.
Elsewhere in the novel, Chaudhuri, while speaking about Puti, the only daughter of Khuku’s dead elder sister and her only son, Mohit, has described Calcutta as a city of “bad dream[s]” and an enticing city:
Yet this city that Mohit had been born into seemed sometimes like a bad dream to Puti, with posters, and endless peeling political messages on the walls (360).
Communal Riots:
Distinct episodes of communal riots have often troubled the urban life in Calcutta. Like Amitav Ghosh in his The Shadow Lines, Amit Chaudhuri in his Freedom Song also represents Calcutta as a city of riots, curfews, and communal feuds and turmoil. But there is a difference in this regard between the two novels, for while Ghosh’s novel highlights the riots of the 1970s in the city of Calcutta, Chaudhuri’s novel represents the riots in the city in the last decade of the 20th century. In fact, Riots in the history of the city of Calcutta are nothing new. Between 1911 and 1992 the city witnessed at least six major riots most of which erupted due to communal issues. There was a riot between the Hindus and the Muslims in 1911 in Calcutta, and again another one on 19th February, 1921 between the Hindus and the Anglo-Indians of the then Calcutta. The city also witnessed a large-scale of Hindu-Muslim riot in the month of September 1918 which was caused by, to quote Suranjan Das, “the economic marginalization of Muslims [by the Marwaris] in Calcutta
. . .” (Das, 75). Then there occurred another communal riot in 1926 caused similarly by “. . . a significant increase in the general Muslim antagonism towards the Marwaris, an anger intensified by the economic boycott of Muslims by the Marwais” (Das, 75).
Das also records that “Between 1911 and 1921 alone, nearly 90,000 people were displaced from their slums, most of whom were Muslims” (Das, 75). Then, there was the Great Calcutta Action Day or the Direct Action Day of 16 August 1946 (just one year before the Independence) that continued in the city for a whole week. Suranjan Das in his essay “The 1992 Calcutta Riot in Historical Continuum: A Relapse into ‘Communal Fury’?” (Das, 283) puts the number of casualties within the first three days of the riot as exceeding 4,000, with more than 10,000 residents left homeless in the city. The communal riot again relapsed in the city when Bangladesh got its independence in 1971. This heinous communal violence between the Hindus and the Muslims in Calcutta recurred once again towards the end of 1992 and in the beginning of 1993 after the historical demolition of Babri masjid in Uttar Pradesh on December 6, 1992, and serial bomb blasts in Bombay (Mumbai) in March 1993. A huge communal turmoil appeared in Mumbai and whole of the nation immediately after the serial blasts which resulted in immeasurable bloodshed nationwide. The city of Calcutta too could not able to appease its people in such a disturbing circumstance. As N. L. Gupta has indicated in his book Communal Riots in India (2000), in Calcutta the death toll was at least 9 (Gupta, 307). Amit Chaudhuri’s Freedom Song, however, has recorded the latter two major communal riots of Calcutta and not all the historical riots that erupted in the city. There are some episodes in the novel that refer to the communal violence of Calcutta in 1992 and 1993. In some of the conversations between Khuku and Mini in the novel, Chaudhuri tries to represent the riot stricken city of Calcutta during the last decade of the 20th century. In one such conversation, Mini while traveling with Khuku in a car down Southern Avenue and upon
observing a billboard that proclaims “Hindu and Muslim amity,” asks Khuku: “When do you think it’ll [the communal violence] end?”, and the author describes thereafter, “. . . the signs of upheaval were still there, the daily killings . . . ” (Chaudhuri, 353). There are also some references, in the novel, to the curfew that was imposed in some sensitive parts of the city of Calcutta during this time (December, 1992). In describing the silence in Khuku’s house, the author says: “It had not been so silent since the days of the curfew” (Chaudhuri, 340). Jochna, the maid-servant in Khuku’s house had been absent for two days, and the author’s grim concern to this curfew is expressed thus:
During the curfew a month ago, all had been disorder and silence, Jochna, who was becoming increasing pretty, had not been able to come to work for two days; there had been tension in her area and fear of violence (341).
The subsequent dislocation in the lives of thousands of poor people in the city is made further clear by the novelist in his words:
It was at such times that the sketchy unfencedness of their existence became palpable, that they must lead lives perpetually and nakedly open to duress. The Muslims had taken out a procession; at night . . . with a tremulous sense of something about to happen, Jochna and her family and other Hindus in the basti [slum] had been moved to a nearby Christian school, while the furious Muslims apparently congregated and went about shouting and protesting (Chaudhuri, 341).
Finally, there is another reference to a fearful situation in Calcutta towards the end of the novel: “an explosion in Central Avenue, not very far from Mini’s building” resulting into a common panic and terror among the inhabitants of the city like Khuku, Mini and a lot of others (Chaudhuri, 452). However, they are later much relieved to learn that the explosion had nothing to do with any riot or violence, but that “it was the arsenal of a local hoodlum that had blown up by accident’ (Chaudhuri, 452).
However, along with all these, Amit Chaudhuri, in these two novels, has also hinted upon some of the other problematic aspects of the city of Calcutta such as the issue of unemployment and economic liberalization, the gradual declination of the industries especially the small and indigenous industries and enterprises in the city, alarming condition of health and hygiene in the metropolis, the ever haunting issue of the extended population in the city of Calcutta, and the issues concerning social life and relationship in an age-old metropolis like Calcutta. Problematic aspects apart, Chaudhuri, nonetheless, represents the city of Calcutta in his novels too “. . . like a work of modern art [too] that neither makes sense nor has utility, but exists for some esoteric aesthetic reason” (Chaudhuri: A Strange and Sublime Address, 11).
Works Cited:
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Chattopadhyay, Jagannath. “Howrah Bridge: Akhon o Takhon” (in Bengali).
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Chaudhuri, Amit. A Strange and Sublime Address. Three Novels. London: Picador, 2001.
. Freedom Song. op. cit.
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Chaudhuri, Sukanta. “Traffic and Transport in Calcutta.” Calcutta: The Living City. op. cit. 149.
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. The Calcutta Chromosome. New Delhi: Ravidayal Publisher, 1996, 2000 and 2001.
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