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How does the dramatic technique suit the theme of the play?
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By focusing attention on the consciousness of an outcast girl, the play sensitizes the viewer/reader to the injustice of distinctions based on the accidents of human birth. Discuss how individual conflict is highlighted against the backdrop of social reality.
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‘I will enthrone you on the summit of all my dishonor, and build your royal seat of my shame, my fear, and my joy’. Pick out more such examples of the interplay of opposites from the text. What does this device succeed in conveying?
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‘Shadow, mist, storm’ on the one hand, ‘flames, fire,’ on the other. Comment on the effect of these and similar images of contrast on the viewer/reader.
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How genuine is the love that Manjula expresses for her sister?
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The sister does not appear in the play but is central to it. What picture of her is built in your mind from references in the play?
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When the image says—‘Her illness was unfortunate. But because of it, she got the best of everything’
What is the nature of Manjula’s reply?
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When the image says—‘Her illness was unfortunate. But because of it, she got the best of everything’
How can it be related to what follows in the play?
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What are the issues that the playwright satirizes through this TV monologue of a celebrity?
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‘Broken Images’ takes up a debate that has grown steadily since 1947—the politics of language in Indian literary culture, specifically in relation to modern Indian languages and English. Discuss.
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The play deals with a Kannada woman writer who unexpectedly produces an international bestseller in English.
Can a writer be a truly bilingual practitioner?
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The play deals with a Kannada woman writer who unexpectedly produces an international bestseller in English.
Does writing in an ‘other tongue’ amount to a betrayal of the mother tongue?
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Why do you think the playwright has used the technique of the image in the play?
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The play is called a monologue. Why is it made to turn dialogic?
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What is the posture the celebrity adopts when the camera is on and when it is off?
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What is the central theme of the poem - ‘Time and again’?
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What apprehensions does Ingram harbour regarding the contemporary film industry?
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"If I find you fighting again, I’ll be back to stop it. Take care; you should not need a tiger to keep the peace." How do the above lines align with the novel ‘A Tiger for Malgudi’?
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Describe the relationship between Captain and his wife in the novel ‘A Tiger for Malgudi’.
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Lakshmi Holmstrom in “The Novels of R. K. Narayan” Calcutta: Writers Workshop Publication, 1973, comments “Different abilities and values are opposed and matched until Pal becomes a “nightmare to Margayya”. Keeping the above statement in mind, trace the evolution of Margayya and Mr. Pal’s relationship.
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