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The IUP Journal of English Studies :
Memoirs of Two Marginalized Women: A Comparative Study of A Life Less Ordinary and The Truth About Me – A Hijra Life Story
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Feminist scholars have long asserted the value of memoirs to explore feminine subjectivities and give the readers a sense of the difficulties involved in the diverse processes of self-actualization that every woman undertakes in her given space. Revathi and Baby’s narratives are significant as their struggles are struggles of the marginalized women. However, this similarity does not entail an identical trajectory in their quest for self-actualization. Both of them have to face separate forms of societal suppression working through various agencies such as patriarchy, institutional religion and cultural taboos. Yet, the narratives celebrate their quest for identity as legitimate ones albeit having their own set of difficulties. These narratives may be ranked alongside Maya Angelou’s I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings and Quentin Crisp’s The Naked Civil Servant in their successful exposition of the inner lives of the marginalized individual and different ways through which they have to evolve survival strategies to claim their own space and identity in society. Baby’s quest is triggered off by her maternal subjectivity as she realizes her own selfhood in the process of trying to give her children a better life. On the other hand, Revathi’s struggle for self-actualization starts from the day she accepts her identity as a transgender individual. The paper tries to establish how these two separate, contemporary narratives coming from marginalized women are a clear indication of the hybrid identities of womanhood prevailing in India today.

 
 
 

Marginalized women and their stories form an interesting counter-discourse within the predominant literary discourse of Indian literature. The memoirs chosen for analysis in this paper are narratives of women whose reality places them in an unenviable position where they have to struggle against their own families and community as well as the larger society in order to create their own identities. The process of self-actualization is fraught with difficulty in the case of both these women. Exploring their selfhood by transcending the roles prescribed by society is not an easy task for both these individuals. For Baby, it involves stepping outside the domestic confines of her existence, especially the role of a wife. Prioritizing her maternal self, ironically, launches her in her journey of selfhood. As her memoir progresses, her maternal subjectivity ultimately evolves into positive sense of selfhood. For Revathi, the struggle is a more difficult one as the process of self-actualization involves asserting her own sexuality which is a far cry from the normative masculinity which society expects out of her (since she was born as a man). Her struggle is therefore twofold: it first involves her declaration of her femininity and later her struggle to be recognized as a transgender woman in her family. Contrary to Baby, she tries to fit into the conventional roles of women in society but ultimately finds her destiny in being a social activist. Thus, Baby and Revathi’s memoirs comprise an attempt to articulate the hybrid identities of Indian women in the 21st century.

The texts that I have chosen feature protagonists who have chosen the medium of the memoir to articulate their stories of survival and their attempt to overcome their marginalization and construct their own identity through a difficult process of adjustment with the community and the society to which they belong. Although novels like Vikas Swarup’s Q&A and Arvind Adiga’s White Tiger have protagonists who survive oppression and various kinds of impediments to achieve their own happy ending, Baby’s story (A Life Less Ordinary) and Revathi’s story (The Truth About Me) document the intersecting natures of marginalization prevalent in India much more faithfully as they are works of non-fiction. As individuals both of them have to construct their own independent identity but true to their Indian origins this quest is more about an attempt to find acceptance within a particular community and sometimes in order to create a safe space for themselves they also go to the extent of choosing an alternative community/family to supplant their original biological one. Allen Cypher in ‘Being Marginalized’ has defined the phenomenon of people being pushed to the margins in the following manner.

 
 
 

English Studies Journal, Memoirs, Marginalized Women, A Comparative Study, A Life Less Ordinary, The Truth About Me, A Hijra Life Story.