Confrontation Between East and West in Ruth Prawer Jhabvala’s Esmond in India
Dr. Parag Bombatkar
Tirpude College of Social Work, Nagpur. 440001
Email:- pgbombatkar@gmail.com
Mob:- 8605388226
Summary:
Ruth Prawer Jhabvala’s short story “Esmond in India” explores themes of cultural dislocation, comic misunderstandings, and the estrangement that arises when western sensibilities confront Indian realities. Through the figure of Esmond — a European who drifts into India after independence seeking personal refreshment and a romanticized escape — Jhabvala stages a narrowly comic but sharply observant examination of colonial aftershocks, the limits of empathy, and the human need for connection. The narrative’s economy, exactness of detail, and restrained irony allow it to analyse the subtle hypocrisies of expatriate life and the ambiguous moral space inhabited by both visitors and residents. The story ultimately asks whether genuine cross-cultural understanding is possible when one party treats place and people as props for individual renewal.
Key Words: Ruth Prawer Jhabvala; Edmond in India; postcolonial fiction; exile and displacement; cultural encounter; narrative irony; expatriate literature; identity; space and setting; moral ambivalence.
DOI link – https://doi.org/10.69758/GIMRJ/2508S01V13P001
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