LANGUAGE IN INDIA

Strength for Today and Bright Hope for Tomorrow

Volume 11 : 12 December 2011
ISSN 1930-2940

Managing Editor: M. S. Thirumalai, Ph.D.
Editors: B. Mallikarjun, Ph.D.
         Sam Mohanlal, Ph.D.
         B. A. Sharada, Ph.D.
         A. R. Fatihi, Ph.D.
         Lakhan Gusain, Ph.D.
         Jennifer Marie Bayer, Ph.D.
         S. M. Ravichandran, Ph.D.
         G. Baskaran, Ph.D.
         L. Ramamoorthy, Ph.D.


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The Enigma of Aberration:
Katherine Mansfield’s Story “A Cup of Tea” and
Maupassant’s “An Adventure in Paris”

Bibhudutt Dash, Ph.D.


Probing the Hidden Recesses of the Human Mind

This essay probes into the hidden recesses of the human psyche where primordial urges and emotions operating at a subterranean level manifest themselves in capricious behavioural changes. The stories examined for the purpose, Mansfield’s “A Cup of Tea” and Maupassant’s “An Adventure in Paris” reveal the characters’ reflexes to adultery in which, as in Mansfield’s, a wife’s increasing possessiveness toward her husband is contrasted with another wife’s studied entry into vice, in “An Adventure in Paris”.

Displaying Two Different Traits – Influence of Baser Passions

Whereas jealousy remains the linchpin in Mansfield’s, in the latter, the intractable ‘curiosity’ of the provincial lawyer’s wife leads to a perfidy in trust. Rosemary Fell, the chief character in the Mansfield story and the lawyer’s wife in Maupassant’s display two traits, possessiveness and faithlessness respectively, two apparently antithetical things in matters of love. The stories highlight how baser passions could obfuscate human dignity and noble intent.


This is only the beginning part of the article. PLEASE CLICK HERE TO READ THE ARTICLE IN PRINTER-FRIENDLY VERSION.


Bibhudutt Dash, Ph.D.
Lecturer in English
Department of English
SCS College
Puri
Odisha, India
bibhudutt@live.com

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