Existential Anguish and Alienation in the Selected Novels of Anita Desai
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.64846/19yf8789Keywords:
Identity crisis, symbolism, cultural displacement, alienation and lonelinessAbstract
This research paper examines the theme of alienation in the selected novels of Anita Desai, highlighting her profound psychological insight into loneliness, emotional suffering, identity crisis, and social isolation. Her characters struggle to balance personal aspirations with societal expectations while remaining trapped between tradition and modernity. Through symbolism, vivid imagery, and the stream-of-consciousness technique, Desai portrays emotional neglect, cultural displacement, and existential anxiety with remarkable depth. The study adopts a qualitative textual approach, employing close reading of selected primary texts supported by relevant secondary critical sources. Psychological and existential perspectives are used to analyze the complex emotional and social realities reflected in her fiction. The paper argues that alienation in Desai’s novels is not merely personal but also psychological, social, cultural, and existential. By combining innovative narrative techniques with deep psychological realism, Anita Desai transforms individual suffering into a universal reflection on the modern human condition, establishing herself as one of the foremost voices in Indian English literature.


