Mapping the Urban Space: Representation of Mumbai in Dattani’s The Big Fat City

Sahitya Akademi award winning only Indian English dramatist Mahesh Dattani’s latest drama The Big Fat City (2014) is considered to be the first black comedy in Indian theatre as in this text the dramatist has sarcastically portrayed the stylized lives of the city dwellers and their involvement in so...

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Main Author: Sreeja Konar
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sarat Centenary College 2018-07-01
Series:PostScriptum: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Literary Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:http://postscriptum.co.in/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/pS3.iiSreeja.pdf
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spelling doaj-048278ee1c8a46ff875fe14332c1e0b52020-11-25T00:27:53ZengSarat Centenary CollegePostScriptum: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Literary Studies2456-75072018-07-013ii13013810.5281/zenodo.1318976Mapping the Urban Space: Representation of Mumbai in Dattani’s The Big Fat CitySreeja Konar0University of BurdwanSahitya Akademi award winning only Indian English dramatist Mahesh Dattani’s latest drama The Big Fat City (2014) is considered to be the first black comedy in Indian theatre as in this text the dramatist has sarcastically portrayed the stylized lives of the city dwellers and their involvement in socialization. Thus the textual fabric of The Big Fat City captures the ever-moving ever-whirling spirit of Mumbai, the city of action where life never stops. People who come into this city with aspirations and who go back from here with shattered longings all want not only to have a big bite of it but also to connect with its ‘nerves’. The ‘big fat city’ is not void or lifeless but the gap of reciprocity renders it with barrenness. Taking cue from social critics I, in this article, am going to depict how Mumbai is presented in three dimensions – a mirror, a mirage and a magnet which reflects the people’s lives, eludes the dreams of its people and attracts people respectively. Thus the city becomes a character and influences the lives of its inhabitants incessantly.http://postscriptum.co.in/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/pS3.iiSreeja.pdfDattaniMumbaicityurban
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sreeja Konar
spellingShingle Sreeja Konar
Mapping the Urban Space: Representation of Mumbai in Dattani’s The Big Fat City
PostScriptum: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Literary Studies
Dattani
Mumbai
city
urban
author_facet Sreeja Konar
author_sort Sreeja Konar
title Mapping the Urban Space: Representation of Mumbai in Dattani’s The Big Fat City
title_short Mapping the Urban Space: Representation of Mumbai in Dattani’s The Big Fat City
title_full Mapping the Urban Space: Representation of Mumbai in Dattani’s The Big Fat City
title_fullStr Mapping the Urban Space: Representation of Mumbai in Dattani’s The Big Fat City
title_full_unstemmed Mapping the Urban Space: Representation of Mumbai in Dattani’s The Big Fat City
title_sort mapping the urban space: representation of mumbai in dattani’s the big fat city
publisher Sarat Centenary College
series PostScriptum: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Literary Studies
issn 2456-7507
publishDate 2018-07-01
description Sahitya Akademi award winning only Indian English dramatist Mahesh Dattani’s latest drama The Big Fat City (2014) is considered to be the first black comedy in Indian theatre as in this text the dramatist has sarcastically portrayed the stylized lives of the city dwellers and their involvement in socialization. Thus the textual fabric of The Big Fat City captures the ever-moving ever-whirling spirit of Mumbai, the city of action where life never stops. People who come into this city with aspirations and who go back from here with shattered longings all want not only to have a big bite of it but also to connect with its ‘nerves’. The ‘big fat city’ is not void or lifeless but the gap of reciprocity renders it with barrenness. Taking cue from social critics I, in this article, am going to depict how Mumbai is presented in three dimensions – a mirror, a mirage and a magnet which reflects the people’s lives, eludes the dreams of its people and attracts people respectively. Thus the city becomes a character and influences the lives of its inhabitants incessantly.
topic Dattani
Mumbai
city
urban
url http://postscriptum.co.in/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/pS3.iiSreeja.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT sreejakonar mappingtheurbanspacerepresentationofmumbaiindattanisthebigfatcity
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