Wednesday 10 October 2012

WOMEN’S PERSISTENT BATTLE FOR SURVIVAL IN ANITA DESAI’S VOICES IN THE CITY







The legal subordination of one sex to another—is wrong in itself and now one of the chief hindrances to human improvement; and that it ought to be replaced by a system of perfect equality, admitting no power and privilege on the one side, nor disability on the other.(Mill 1)

John Stuart Mill in his essay The Subjection of Women felt that it is a hindrance to human development and improvement to deprive women from contributing to the society. The emancipation of women would bring positive benefits not only to women but also to men and  to entire humanity.
Women suffer a traditional prejudice and inevitably have to do what men dictate them to do. Woman is subjugated by man and is exploited to meet out his selfish gratification, to satiate his sensual pleasures, to scintillate and glorify his life, to manipulate her for his growth and development, to defame and degrade her for embellishing his dignity. On the contrary, men have never attempted to elevate women’s status. Women were deprived of the basic amenities of life. They were denied the right to education, voting, ownership of any form or land or business and they were not allowed to pursue a career of their choice. Even in the present context, women are denied equal rights in their work place. They are paid less than men for the same work, denied promotions and training opportunities, shut out of high paying jobs and occupations, and subjected to sexual harassment. A woman was generally subject to the whims of man--her husband, her father or her son due to social norms or patriarchal norms. In Pagan nations, as has been tersely remarked, “Women are thrice slaves. Their fathers govern them in childhood, their husbands in youth, and their sons in old age.”  According to the men’s perception of women or the male concept, women were both physically and mentally susceptible and therefore should be ‘taken care of’. Social theories affirmed this concept.
Women are confined to particular roles framed by men to limit their freedom and oppress them from one generation to the next. It was necessary for feminists to crusade against these convictions and delusions. The veracity of the patriarchal norms were examined, defied and substantiated with feminist theories. The patriarchal system favoured the male dominance and supremacy. The egoistic predominance of men pervaded in all spheres of social, economic and political activities. It oppressed, suppressed and women were in a jeopardy of being lost in men’s world . “He is the Subject, he is the Absolute--she is the Other”(Beauvoir xxii) –an insignificant, subordinate to men.
Women had to fight their battles to overcome the subordination and a secondary place offered to them by men, to sustain their existence and make their survival fit. Writing was the only instrument –a powerful weapon, through which they were allowed to communicate their experience. They expressed their defiance through their writings. The archetypes of the ideal women were powerful and women writers had to struggle to break this conviction. The concept and the position of womanhood had to undergo a drastic change to which writers committed their works.  Their emancipation lies in not limiting women in their traditional roles but in expanding and awakening them to several other possibilities. Simon de Beauvoir’s description of an independent woman in The Second Sex, where [woman]she , “ once ceases to be a parasite, the system based on her dependence crumbles; between her and the universe there is no longer any need for a masculine mediator” (Beauvoir 412)
Feminism focuses on limiting or eradicating gender inequalities, promoting women’s rights and finding solutions to women’s issues. Feminists have challenged the existing presumption and misconceptions about women. Feminism strives to lobby for the rights of the marginalized. ‘Self’ is the pivotal issue of feminism. Women have been subordinated, diminished, devalued and belittled by the patriarchal systems. Women were kept in a state of ignorance due their lack of education.   
Indian women writers have involved themselves in sustained struggle to retain their rights as writers and they attempt to expound the cause of women’s sufferings and tried to affirm the position of women with respect to the Indian context. Women writers like Kamala Markandaya, Ruth Prawar Jhabvala and Anita Desai provided ground for discussion of women and their problems against the traditional image by delineating women, their psyche and their struggle to liberate and establish themselves as an individual. Many women writers succeeded them in shattering the age old institutions of marriage, family, human relationships and socio-cultural constructs. They dealt with issues related to women and gave a great impetus to the growth of  creative writing in English. They identify a variety of existences with a  range of characters.
Cultural alienation and loss of identity are presented with a deep insight by these writers . The novel voices and espouses the need for emancipation. The novelists became their mouthpieces to raise their voice against the aggressive dominance of the male society and the unfair rigid code of conduct imposed on them. The women novelists committed themselves to fictionalizing women’s issues with an idea of ameliorating their deteriorated position.
Anita Desai is indubitably a writer who enunciates the problems faced by women in a patriarchal society. She is interested in the psychic life of her characters. She is the pioneer of psychological novel as James Joyce and Virginia Woolf. She penetrates profoundly into the inner working of the mind. She briefly describes the disappointments, disillusionments and the futility of life in a world which is dominated by men. Desai’s women characters rebel against the patriarchal community in order to explore their own potential or to live on their own terms, regardless of the consequences that such a rebellion may have on their lives. They criticize the cultural ideologies that obstruct their way to freedom. Her characters have the habit of withdrawal and live a life of detachment from the society. The self-chosen withdrawal is a form of weapon for survival in a patriarchal community.  Withdrawal does not allow them to achieve the fulfillment and make them ‘complete’ beings.
Desai’s women crave for freedom within their community and within the institution of marriage. She does not envision an ideal marriage. Her married women characters, for example, Monisha in the novel Voices in the City, become depressed, violent or self-destructive. They kill or destroy themselves when they are unable to cope with the expectations of the society, family and relationships. The women characters grow up intellectually and psychologically. “The nemesis of these women is not a private one, but an outgrowth of the complex social context, immediate family environment and the relationships with their men”(Singh 94).
Desai’s women characters find freedom not by living in their own narrow selves or by clinging to others but by connecting with others and by asserting their intellectual as well as economic independence. Education allows the economic independence which helps them to exonerate themselves from mortification and frees them from dependency on men.
Monisha’s familiarity with the philosophies of Kafka, Dostoyevsky helps her to free herself from the trivial talks of women in her household. She is unable to shrug-off her emotional and psychological dependence on men, family, community and society. She maintains a diary, which gives an outlet to her oppressed feelings. She records her reactions and her impressions of the city. She is intelligent but is not able to step out of the taboos laid on her by the joint-family system. She cannot stand assaulting existential forces in the family and therefore, she sets herself on fire. Monisha is strongly under the influence of the Gita , the holy scripture and the principle of stoicism and detachment. She does not want to long or hanker for the love the society refuses to give her. She does not passionately yearn for the husband to reciprocate her love. Consequently,she is carried away by her suicidal impulses.
As in Maslow’s hierarchy of needs, biological needs like thirst, hunger, sex , security are not prioritized by Monisha. To her, these are all not the essentials of existence. In her family which is pregnant with people, the dreadful isolation makes her long for love and communion.  Had she a child, she would not have felt alone , but her fallopian tubes are blocked and therefore it becomes a distant dream to be blessed with conception. And she suffers intensely because of the futility of her life. Ultimately, she has an eternal quest for a meaningful existence.
Her problems stem from the conflicts with the traditional identity of women and from male domination and the rigid, retributive attitude of the patriarchal Indian society towards women and from the various kinds of gender discrimination and from the lack of solidarity among women. Monisha has no alternative rather than to succumb to the expectation of her family.
Monisha is in a male dominated society governed by rigid traditions, social taboos, constrictions and restrictions. She wishes to extricate herself from the obsequious servitude,   inhuman torture of her husband and her in-laws, the humiliating social taboos and the expected values of womanhood. Her husband fails to reciprocate her love and fail to understand her emotions and feelings. Nobody cares for her or  her tastes or appreciates her presence. She is inconspicuous by her presence. She is ignored by Jiban and he knows nothing about her. Marriage builds harmony when there is a mutual understanding, sound compatibility, love, loyalty and forfeiture.  But as Simon de Beauvoir observes, “Marriage is the destiny traditionally offered to woman by society” (52) .
In Monisha’s marital life, marriage offers her nothing. She derives no happiness or issues out of marital life with a “boring non-entity, this blind moralist, this complacent quoter of Edmund Burke and Wordsworth, Mahatma Gandhi and Tagore, this rotund ,minute –minded and limited official” (Voices in the City 198). There is no proper understanding, mutual love and harmony which marriage promises to a man and wife. Her relationship with her husband is characterized only by ‘loneliness’. She lacks privacy and a sensitive woman who feels desperately lonely and lost” the lost princess of the fairy tale, under a secret spell”(Voices 197). Her private parts, her organs are scrutinized by her sister-in-laws “…my insides: my ovaries, my tubes, all my recesses moist with blood, washed in blood, laid open, laid bare to their scrutiny”(Voices 113)
The patriarchal practices which reduce women’s status to inferior social beings are further perpetrated by myths and traditions which are rooted in Indian society. Women’s oppression is based on the familial structures of patriarchy. The laws are men-made laws and so there is discrimination in these laws. Men are spared from punishments for their sins. Pre-marital virginity, post-marital fidelity and chastity are sole property of women and insisted upon women by the traditional society while men are allowed sexual liberty and others.  As Nirode, she is not able to live a life of escape as she is a woman who “struts and frets [her] hour upon the stage
 And then is heard no more”.
Women have strongly opposed and incessantly fought against such double-standards and claimed equality and freedom. They fought firmly to get back their birth rights because the liberation of women necessitates the liberation of all human beings. They need to shatter all the system that shackles their existence.
Her life is without a touch of love, hate or warmth. Instead of the element of love , element of fear is replaced in her. In the Bow bazaar house, the endless chanting, the people, the aunts, uncles, in-laws makes her fear them and desolate herself from them. She finds solace in the darkness on the roof-top and finds peace which she feels cannot be found even in sleep that has nightmares. She grows smaller every day, loses more and more of weight and wishes to be invisible. The house makes her wish to become invisible instead of living a meaningless life. She is accused of stealing her own husband Jiban’s money. Jiban instead of supporting her and rescuing her from the accusation by his mother, fails her. The charge of theft is the heaviest blow she receives from the family and from Jiban.
The humiliation she suffers, the barrenness which is discussed and mocked by her sister-in-laws, her sterility, their sarcasm on her wardrobe full of books, her void life, lack of love  and the final remark of the mother-in-law “I will not have a thief in my house” (Voices 137) makes her feel that she’s living a “Traceless, meaningless, uninvolved (life)—does this not amount to non-existence,please? “(Voices 140)
The predicament of the entire ill-fated young brides in the Indian society ‘doing nothing’ but simply waiting meaninglessly and doing petty household work “to sort the husk from the rice…” (Voices 121) is explicitly portrayed in the novel. Though death is not what Monisha or any young bride wants, she engulfs herself in the flame. Her suffering is unique, and she bears the brunt silently. As her barrenness, her life is also barren without a speck of greenery. She is entranced, entrapped, encased, enclosed ‘in a steel container’, ‘closed in a cage.’ Even her death does not present a solution to the quest for meaning existence. She is not able to carve her destiny. She is rather battered, crossed and lacerated by the society. Not able to survive, she succumbs to death.
Anita Desai’s women are victims of circumstances in an uncongenial environment and they fight a persistent battle against her lost self and in the process of the search is doomed to degeneration and destruction. Anita Desai’s concern is with “ the journey within” and the recurring theme is “ the agony of existence in a hostile and male-dominated society that is not only conservative but also taboo-ridden.” (Dhawan 12)
Anita Desai has dexterously portrayed the pathetic struggle the women undergo in their life. Her women refute and defy the patriarchal norms to liberate them from the clutches of the traditional myths of subjugation and submission.


References:
o   Desai, Anita. Voices in the City. Orient Paperbacks. New Delhi.2001

o   Beauvoir, Simone de. The Second Sex. trans. H. M. Parshley. Harmondsworth: Penguine, 1983.

o   Mill, John Stuart. The Subjection of Women.D.Appleton & Company. New York. 1870.

o   Dhawan,R.K. ed. Indian Women Novelists. Set I:Vol.1. Prestige Books. NewDelhi. 1999.

o   Piciucco, Pier Paolo. A Companion to  Indian English Fiction. Atlantic Publishers & Distributors. New Delhi. 2004

o   Singh, Sunaina. The Novels of Margaret Atwood and Anita Desai: A Comparative Study in Feminist Perspectives. Creative Books .New Delhi.1994

       

         Paper Presented at the UGC Sponsored National Conference on Patriarchal     
         Predomination of Women in Indian English Novels: A Feminist Approach -8 & 9 
        October,2012,  Bishop Heber College, Trichirappalli

Saturday 4 August 2012

நீங்காத நினைவுகள்

நிகழ்வுகள் எல்லாம் நினைவு  கூறுகையில்...

நெஞ்சம் விம்மி  அழும் நேரமெல்லாம்;
சோகத்தின் தாக்கத்தை தாங்க  திராணியில்லாமல்
துவண்ட காலமெல்லாம்;
என் துயரம் என்னுள் அடங்காது
தவித்த நொடிகள் எல்லாம்
நான் கடந்து வந்ததெங்கனம்?

தவம் போல் வாழ்க்கை ,
இம்மி  பிசகாமல் வாழும் கட்டாயநிலை
உணர்வுகளை  கடிவாளம் கொண்டு இதயத்துள்
வைக்கும் கடினமான முயற்சி
வாழ்வே  ஒரு சூன்யம், வெற்றிடம், இருட்டறை
என்பது போன்ற மன இறுக்கம்  .

என்றாலும் --
நிறைவு  உண்டு .
சுதந்திரம்  உண்டு.
தலையீடுகள்   இல்லாத
உரிமைகள் கொல்லாத
உறவுகளின் இடைஞ்சல்கள்  இல்லாத 
முழுமையான இரம்மியமான அமைதியான சூழல்
இச்சுதந்திரம் நான்  போற்றும் ஒன்று .

காதலில் கட்டுண்டு கிடக்கத்தான்
உனக்காக  பல வருடம் காத்திருந்தேன்
என்றாலும் இன்று
நான் விரும்பாத  தனிமைச் சிறை.

என் காத்திருப்பின்  பலன்:
வாழ்நாள் முழுதும் நெஞ்சம் நிறையும்
எண்ணமெல்லாம் வியாபிக்கும்
மனம்  பூரிப்படையச் செய்யும்
இனிமையான  நீங்காத நினைவுகள்

அவை --
என் வாழ்வை செழிக்கச் செய்யும் நீரூற்று
வசந்தத்தின் வைகறை
வருடும் இனிய இளம் தென்றல்

அவை --
என்னை உயிர்ப்பிக்க, புதுப்பிக்க
எனக்காக நீ விட்டுச் சென்றவை
திரும்பத்  திரும்ப என்னைத்  தொட்டுச் செல்லும்
நீங்காத நினைவலைகள் .


காலைப்  பொழுதும், சுடர் வானமும்
ஈரக் காற்றும், பனித்துளியும் புல்வெளியும்
வண்ணம் தீட்டும் வானவில்லும்
முழுநிலவின் ஒளியில் பூக்களும், பிறவும்
சரமாய் ஒளிரும் விளக்குகளும்,
நல்ல இலக்கியமும், தேர்ந்த  நல்லோவியமும் 
கொஞ்சும் கொன்றை பூங்கொத்தும் ,
மனம் மறக்கும் இசையும் ,
செறிந்த மரங்களும் , பனிமூட்டமும் , மலர்ந்த மலரும்
தவழும் நதியும் ...
இன்னும் ... இன்னும் ...
உனக்கு பிடித்த  யாவும்
உன்னையே ஞாபகப் படுத்துகின்றன
எஞ்ஞனம் மறப்பேன் ?


மனதின் சாயல்கள்  பிரதிபலிக்கும் செயல்கள் 
கருத்து  ஒருமித்து பரஸ்பரம் புரிந்து  கொண்ட நாட்கள்
ஒருவரின் நினைவில் ஒருவர் வாழ்ந்த காலங்கள்
தம் நிலை  தாம் மறந்த தூய அன்பு
இறைவனுக்கு ஒப்பு --


மறந்தும்  பிறர் மனம் நோகச்  செய்யாத குணம்
மனிதனை மனிதனாய்  மதிக்கும் நேயம்
நிர்மலமான  முகம் 
நல்லனவற்றைப்  பாராட்டும் மானசீகம்
காதல் ஒளிரும் கண்கள்
அவை சொல்லும் எண்ணங்கள்...     
எனக்கே  எனக்கென்ற காதல் நெஞ்சம்
கிடைத்தற்கு  அரிய அந்த  பொக்கிஷம்


சொல்லும் செயலும் மூச்சும்  பேச்சும்
ஒருமித்த அக்காதல்  இனிவருமா  ?


"நான் உன்னைச்  சேர்ந்தவள்  "
என்கின்ற உணர்வு
இங்கு இதுவரையில் திரும்பவும்  நான் ஏனோ பெறவேயில்லை .

என் காதல் உன்னிடமே  தொடங்கியது
எனவே உன்னிடமே முடியட்டும்
அதுவரை-
உனக்காக வாழ்ந்திடும்
எனக்காக  நீ  காத்திரு
சொர்க்கத்தின் வாயிலில் .




சாருமதி





Wednesday 11 July 2012

Theme of Failure in Anita Desai’s Voices in the City


             Anita Desai, a prominent contributor to the development of Indian English novel is commended for her art of characterization. As a novelist of high order, she has the dexterity to create characters that are unique and solitary. Her characters are lonely, introverted, disconsolate, disconcerted, frustrated, free minded, obstinate and tragic. Her galaxy of characters is a world of richness, variety and complex. Her characters are life-like and represent the world which we live. Each of her characters is an unfathomable mystery who reveals their realization of self, the agony of hopelessness, their sense of alienation, their search for identity, their indomitable courage in deciding their own way of action, their persistent fight against the social and economic bondage, and their psychological conflicts.
Desai’s protagonists are basically tragic and they fail persistently. They are psychologically disturbed, morbid, self-absorbed and incoherent in their manner and disjointed expressions. They are confronted with a hostile social environment and they fall into a state of passiveness. They share their   experience and perceptions about life and try to search for the real meaning of life. The characters live a lonesome life and love privacy.
            In the novel, Voices in the City , Nirode a young man of twenty-five admits himself that he is “a congenital failure”(8) in the heartless and soulless dark pandemonium . He is an indomitable pessimist in the “devil city”. Though he calls himself a journalist, he “ was still, the anonymous and shabby clerk on a newspaper, calling himself a journalist, for that is a fine, crisp and jaunty word. But the dismal truth was that all he did was cut long strips of newspaper and paste and file them, occasionally venturing out to verify a dull fact in some airless office room.” (8) Nirode feels that it is impossible to work under any man, by his orders, at a stipulated time, at a meaningless job. He loathes the superciliousness, their arrogance and their blindness in following a mundane senseless job. He feels that it is ridiculous to spend their entire energy, lives and intelligence on “something that does not matter”(18) He believes  that it is better not to live at all rather than to live a life of meaningless. He says, ” Better to leap out of the window and end it all instead of smearing this endless sticky glue of senselessness over the world. Better not to live.” (18)
According to Nirode, he should live a sensible life by indulging in a sensible work or otherwise he should not live at all. He regrets that he has not begun his life yet. He aspires to become a writer and all that he wants, he says, decisively are “three drinks a night and a room of his own ... three drinks for inspiration… and a room in which to write in!”(11). Though ‘three drinks and a room’ seems like a princedom, he is determined to get it.   
Though he has reminiscences of his childhood and of his mother at Kalimpong, he recalls with disgust his mother’s attraction for their neighbor, the flirtatious Major Chadha, which he believes has deprived him of his mother’s love towards him. When he reads the letters from his mother, he expresses such resentment about his mother mentioning Major Chadha’s name “ how unashamedly she wrote the hideous name, so like a cooking pot full of yellow food, or a rag of dirty underwear. How helpful was this Chadha, providing her with male company and admiration.”(37)  Nirode  feels that even marriage is destructive, negative and decadent. His view on marriage after meeting Sarla is that it is heinous. He wants to escape from the journey which allures David so much. There is no hope about anything or any companionship in his life.  He feels even education is all rot .He finds no compatibility or comfort with any body except the respect he holds for the painter Dharma and his Irish iterant Davis.
Strangely, Nirode is in pursuit of failure while the whole world runs behind material success and fame. He wants to fail irresistibly and quickly. He want the magazine to fail quickly. To him failure should be quick, descending should be quick. His wish is to see the depth of failure quickly even before he climbs the ladder of success.
… I want it to fail –quickly. Then I want to see if I have the spirit to start moving again, towards my next failure. I want to move from failure to failure to failure, step by step to rock bottom. I want to explore that depth. When you climb a ladder, all you find at the top is space, all you can do is leap off—fall to the bottom. I want to get there without that meaningless climbing.  I want to descend, quickly.(40)
    
Though he aspired to be a writer , though he succeeded in his venture of the magazine Voice,  he is neither contented nor proud about his success. He wanted to get rid of the magazine . He wanted to avoid it. Dharma’s sarcasm  and disapproval might have aggravated his wish to get rid of the responsibility of running the magazine, “ the magazine tasted now to him—artificial and a waste. The fact that his friends so believed in it, so encouraged it, made him despise them all the more. Yet he was responsible for it . He hated this being responsible for anything at  all.”(72)
            He informs David that he does not want to wait  for the failure of the magazine.
As the angry young man of John Osborne , Nirode is also angry and frustrated about the society. He articulates that the society is responsible for the individual’s failure.The society should feel guilty for every individual’s failure in this world. “Society must have some kind of guilt complex about us after all.” (59) Hence he hates the world. “He loathes the world that could offer him no crusade, no pilgrimage and he loathed himself for not having the true, unwavering spirit of either within him.”(64)
His  habit of withdrawal, withdrawal of love  and resistance had grown stronger that he is not willing to accept love. He is prideful and does not wish to submit or commit himself to any sort of bondage. He feels these attachments to life an entrapment, a mesh . Though he lives in a miserable state , he still wishes to be economically independent . He suffers from such contempt on his mother that he refuses to sign the forms when his mother is willing to open a bank account in Nirode’s name. He says,” Tell her I want no share of it , no share of banks or finance or insurance and all the rest of her bleeding equipment. Tell her she’ll never get me to sign my name or fill in a form… I’m done with signing my name, believing my name,or having a name. Tell her, I’m nameless. Tell her that.”(134)  
When the whole world aspires and perspires to achieve success, every individual wants to  become a name and desires to hold some kind of responsibility, Nirode  on the contrary wants to fail, becomes nameless and hates to be responsible for anything.
Desai’s characters are manifested with the traits of introspection, introversion, incompatibility and inability to compromise  makes them lead a life of isolation. His characters are not flat and they change, permeate and grow psychologically under the stream-of – consciousness. Very few writers have surpassed Desai in the demarcation and delineation of the protagonist.  Her interest in the psychic life of  mankind has made her explore the unexplored arenas of human mind. The chaotic, conflicting and the profound struggle in the inner recesses of human beings makes her a distinctive novelist. Her novels are introspective and try to trace the workings of the mind in their struggle against the odds of the social and emotional world.

Tuesday 12 June 2012

DIDACTICISM IN SCIENCE FICTION FILMS



                Science fiction films has a long history with wide range of films to delve. The first science fiction film based on Jules Verne's novel is Le Voyage dans la Lune, created by Georges Melies in 1902. Several if science fiction films have characteristic themes that support elements of science ,technology, facts about aliens, planets in the outer space withe unrestrained fancy and fantasy of unrealistic or improbable suppositions. Science fiction films are prophetic--predicting  a life set in a distant future. It expresses the disastrous effects of the scientific inventions to the earth. It portrays the repercussion of the effects of science and technology on the environment of the contemporary society. With the changing precepts of technology, the unsophisticated and crude films have changed to matured and proliferated films. The films resonates the hostility of contemporary people towards alien elements and the alien world, the evil and heinous aspects of  science and technology.

           The themes also include the subjects of future--a future better or worse than the present, life on other planets, the crisis created by science or technological innovations, the destruction of the world by nuclear inventions, the international co-operation against invaders from outer space or monsters or any other dangerous threats of fatal viruses.

            In science fiction films, the themes revolve around aliens & Martians, strange potential creatures, weird ghastly species from outer space,space shuttles, meteors, clash of worlds, time travel, spaceships, Robots and droids, giant monstrous beings, space fights, virus & diseases, genetics & DNA, extraordinary scientists, fantastic breathtaking journeys to moon and to other planets, splendid vision of the galaxy, cyberspace, cyberwar, Bio war etc.  A threat that the earth is endangered by species of the other world forms an inevitable theme of the science fiction films. The aliens from distant planets intimidate earthly creatures and cause devastation to earth in order to make their planet a super power.

           The science fiction films have highly imaginative visual images of space ships,imaginary voyages, exploration into the unexplored worlds, space fight against aliens and their strange habitats and habits. The films visualize rise of a superhero. They depict ordinary human beings as their protagonist but they gain super hero capability and power in course of action. They gain incredible strength and fortitude to fight against a common foe of the society--an alien, a monster or a robot. The hero demonstrates extraordinary and astonishing courage, when there is a stressful point or a breaking point of saving the earth or saving innocent people from a destructive force. A good deal of sacrifice and other qualities as high-mindedness, love for fellowbeings, mutual understanding, compatibility, courage to encounter trials and tribulations, confidence in one's own self, living in harmony, exhibiting valour are some of the traits in a hero or a super hero in sci-fi films.

        Generally, the animated science films are watched by children and the moral values a film instil in their tender minds is significant. The films have to be instructive inculcating the virtues and the vices of the world and the ways to discriminate the good from the bad. The films should be consciously didactic because the young minds are inspired by the action of the protagonist with superhuman power. Children are concerned with making moral distinctions to tend their hearts of virtue and innocence.To become a responsible human being or to become a profligate depends on the path of their way. They learn moral values for guidance from their family environment and society to act truthfully and act with moral strength without swerving towards temptations. The children, sometimes even adults get moral clarity through stories and through films. 

Qualities as endurance, tolerance, confidence and the convictions of faith in religion, faith, in brotherhood, and regard for truth, peace and harmony are important traits which shape them as individuals. Whether to be humane or inhuman depends on the ratio of goodness and badness complicatedly blended in us. The appellation of a saint or the condemnation of a devil deservers or depends on the intemperance of either our virtue or vice. Despite the disappointments, disillusionments and the ambiguities of life, the films asserts an essential optimism that good triumphs evil, problems can be solved, things will turn out well, happiness is achievable, triumph is near, success is possible to those who endeavour .
 
Films appeal people of all ages invariably. They are the most potent means by which perceptions, values and attitudes are transmitted from one generation to the next. The  films’ recurrent  themes  of rescuing and saving , courage , adventure, mysteries of the other world,  good triumph over the evil, the virtuous winning the vicious, the delight in defeat of the evil-doers, the drastic crash of the alien space flight, the extinction of the monsters etc. appeal children. Most popular films in the animated series include Wall-E, Monsters Vs Aliens, Mars needs Moms, Lilo & Stitch, Chicken Little, Planet 51, The Iron Giant, Star Wars :The Clone Wars, Astroboy, Fly me to the Moon, Ghost in the Shell, The Transformers: TheMovie, Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within , Treasure Planet, Meet the Robinsons, AppleSeed, Skyblue, Starchaser: The Legend of Orin, Battle for Terra, Heavy Metal, Akira, Titan A.E, Rock and Rule, Live Freaky! Die Freaky! Mutant Aliens, Atlantis: The Lost Empire, Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius, Space Chimps, A Scanner Darkly etc.,

The paper intends to find the values of humanity and other substantiating themes as  restoration of Peace and Order, Freeing the earth from the clutches of Alien force, Conservation of the Environment, Destructive Vs Constructive forces, Love, Alienation, Meaning of existence, etc. in the animated Science fiction films as Wall-E, Monsters Vs Aliens and Mars needs Moms. These Science Fiction films are didactic; yet do not overly burden them with instructive, factual, educational, contemplative issues. 

WALL-E

Wall-E  is one of the best and most accomplished Sci-fi animated films,  with a robot love story on the surface and a serious theme of environmental destruction. The film is set in the year 2700 and the earth has become a ghastly place unfit for habitation. It is a city of skyscrapers raised out of garbage. For hundreds of years, WALL-E (Waste Allocation Load Lifter Earth) has been taking out the trash, and collecting precious bric-a-brac in order to shed off the boredom of his dreary routine. After hundreds of solitude, WALL-E finds a sleek search robot named Eve to whom he presents his inadvertently discovered ‘tiny, perfect green plant’, which he found growing in the rubble and transplanted to an old shoe.

Appreciating the value of his remarkable discovery, she excitedly races back to let the humans know that there's hope for their return to their home planet. When Eve, WALL-E unable to be alone, losing the only friend he's ever known eagerly follows her to space. The descendants of the Earth who live in Axiom have become “massive, flabby beings with tiny, almost vestigial limbs due to the low-gravity in the space ship. They incapable of movement, spend their days in moving recliners equipped with screens and live in their own virtual worlds. The space-station resembles the giant mall of “ Buy & Large”. In such a meaningless, hollow, worthless, futile life has a hope of retrieval when Eve brings the plant as a sign of survival on Earth. At the station, the plant becomes a proof that Earth is ready to be re-colonized.

WALL-E also gradually realizes that he has unknowingly found a secret that could save planet Earth, and once again make the ravaged planet safe for all humankind. When the auto-pilot computer, acting on hastily given instructions sent many centuries before, tries to prevent the people of Earth from returning, by stealing the plant, WALL-E, EVE, the portly captain, and a band of broken robots stage a mutiny. Eventually, life on earth is resumed by human influence, combined with a little bit of artificial intelligence and robot.

It is a thought provoking film which makes us realize of what happens to the trash which we throw carelessly into this earth. It is a cautionary fable which initiates us to become conscious of the recklessness of human beings in their concern for the planet bestowed by God. We should not be shallow in spending thriftily on unnecessary things for flamboyance. In fact, Earth will has become a stark wasteland if proper care is not taken on the various issues as Global warming, Ocean Acidification, Ozone depletion, Coral bleaching, Species extinction etc, are not focused and rectified properly, this cautionary tale with striking ecological implications will become a reality.

            Wall-E gives an apocalyptic spectacle of the world and is a intimidating stimulation to the young children about the plight of their planet in future. It is a startling reminder that they have to live like the human who hover in an incredibly large orbiting spaceship Axiom if we do not heed properly to the threats of danger. It is a story about love and loneliness, perseverance and triumph, the possibilities of redeeming this earth from disaster and devastation. 

Monsters Vs Aliens

The most decipherable types of characters in science-fiction history are monsters and aliens.  The stereotypical fight between the monsters and the aliens, An ordinary Californian woman, Susan Murphy, was struck by a meteorite from outerspace on her wedding day to a Weather-Reporter in a TV channel, Derek Dietl. A substance called Quantonium is absorbed by her and immediately she grows into a tall giantess. She is ensnared by military, labelled as Ginormica and put in an exclusive prison headed by General Monger as a  part of a team of monsters. An alien named Gallaxhar detects the quantonium radiation emanating from Earth and deploys a gigantic robotic probe to find it. 

            General Monger convinces the President to use the monsters to fight the robot, promising the monsters freedom if they succeed. Susan and the monsters succeed in defeating the robot. Set free, Susan returns home with a hope to seek help from Derek, but he breaks up with her. Broken, she slowly realizes that after she became a giant, she has improved into a woman of courage, boldness and independent and feels her monster life better. When she is convinced to live with the monsters, she is suddenly abducted by Gallaxhar to his spaceship. Susan is trapped by Gallaxhar into the machine that extracts quantonium from her body, shrinking her to her normal size. Meanwhile, Gallaxhar, clones an army to invade Earth. She reabsorbs the quantonium , restores her giant size and with the help of the monsters and the General self-destructs the spaceship.
The monsters receive a hero's welcome home.  Even Derek tries to win Susan for the sake of an interview that could benefit his career. Susan rejects him. Thus the motley crew of monsters and the female hero confronts the combat with the four-eyed alien Gallaxhar and save the world from imminent destruction.

The moral value of the movie is that despite the odds, the female hero has the faith and courage to confront an alien. She has the great responsibility of saving the world from the alien.The saying,’ with power comes responsibility’ can be reversed to say ‘ with responsibility comes power’ to Susan and she gets the power to defend the earth and defeat  Gallaxhar. Though she has grown tall with the quantonium, her mental ability strengthens because of the crisis which she faces. The ability comes to her because she wants to save her monster friends. She is posed with the responsibility of saving the Earth and the giant task of  saving the whole of humanity.
The indomitable courage, the boldness to combat and the determination not to “give up”, sacrificial nature not to let down her friends in danger, the duty consciousness to complete the mission assigned to her explicates Susan’s heroic qualities. Her readiness to accept the destiny, the readiness to convince and compose herself after Derek’s rejection, the self-esteem and courage she expresses in rejecting Derek’s offer, and to smile at odds makes her a female hero indubitably. These character traits will inspire children and will make them aspire for a life of strength, courage and boldness.

Mars needs Moms

Mars Needs Moms is a animated movie that is based on one of the masterpiece of Berkeley Breathed. This movie shows children the importance of their mother to them. The storyline of Mars needs Moms is deceptively simple .  A young boy named Milo gains a deeper appreciation for his mom after Martians come to Earth to take her away. . One night, when he has a heated argument with his mother, he wishes he never had a mom. Later that night, his wish comes true when his mother is kidnapped by Martians who plan to steal her "momness" to rear their own young. 

The Martians, led by their villainous supervisor have been observing Earth mothers, passing up those who are too indulgent or unable to control their children. They select Milo's mother based on her ability to command Milo. To rescue his mother, he steals himself to the spaceship. When he reaches Mars, he is jailed but escapes with a help of Gribble, a human in Mars.  Gribble and a Martian girl, Ki helps him to save Milo’s mom. Gribble with his own   experiences of failure to rescue his mother, helps Milo. They after a crucial battle, imprisons the Supervisor. The mother and the son reach home safe while Gribble stay on Mars.

Mars needs Moms   is a film which portrays the importance of parenting and the home as a place of protection and shelter. It also has a strong message of the unconditional love of a mother to her son. A unruly son, a son who wished he never had a mother at all  becomes responsible and is ready to sacrifice his life for the sake of his mother. Here too, in this film, a ordinary boy with no super heroic powers fights with the villainous in a alien land. In a place fortified by strict guard, he manages to rescue his mom with unconquerable courage and boldness. The dire need to save his mother,” whom he never wished he had.” The film is inspiration to children who refuse to be obedient to a mother. It threatens yet instructs that at the need of hour, children exhibit valour and bravery.

As Robert Frost defines poetry, “A poem begins in delight and ends in wisdom.”  . A film not only gives us delight and but also makes us wise. A film delivers a message which inspires the audience and allows a moral clarity in leading their life. The characters depicted in the films epitomise life , resonates the cultural, psychological, philosophical  and historical aspects of the contemporary life. The film are “mirrors of life”. The events in the stories of science fiction also have some semblance of the emotional exchanges we have in real life. For instance, the love story of WALL-E, the lovely robotic dance of Eve and Wall-E has a resemblance of a happy couple in romance. As ashes are left and the gold is consumed, the good in a film expresses a moral vision of life.                                                                                                              

 
 References:
1.      http://www.imdb.com




Paper presented in International Conference on Science Fiction  19-21 January 2012  
organized by Bharathiar University, Cbe & Indian Association for Science Fiction Studies, Vellore & Vigyan Prasar, Noida.