Barsha Basanta Baisakha: A Text Bridging Women and Nature

Authors

  • Kamalpreet Kaur Sohi PG Student, Department of English, Ravenshaw University, Cuttack, Odisha, India
  • Neha Singh Department of English, Faculty, Ravenshaw University, Cuttack, Odisha, India

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.53469/jerp.2025.07(02).17

Keywords:

Nature, Woman, Ecofeminism, Metamorphosis, Defy

Abstract

The paper entitled "Barsha Basanta Baisakha: A text that conjoins women and nature" examines the interplay between femininity and nature, examining the profound links between female selfhood and natural world in the Odia novel Barsha Basanta Baisakha by Pratibha Ray. Woman and nature both complement each other. The relationship between the two has been prevailing since time immemorial. A woman is soft, bright and strong just like nature. At times, she embodies the fierce nature of Rudra. But it is astonishing to find that a woman's life is tied to a thread and that piece of thread is controlled by a man. From youth to old age, she undergoes male dominance despite her reluctance. The protagonist of the novel reflects these cycles, with her maturation dissected from both a physical and spiritual continuum of growth with the alternation of seasons. The text explores the deeper cultural and spiritual ethos of Indian society through the vivid portrayal of seasons—Barsha (rain), Basanta (spring), and Baisakha (summer). Ray weaves a metaphorical tapestry of nature cycles to the emotional, psychological and societal journey of women. It paints readers with the message of cycles of fertility, rebirth, metamorphosis and resilience of life at large. These comparisons with nature are hidden in shades behind the lives of female spectacles which aggrieved by society but again more powerful than nature. The simultaneous intertwining of nature and women opens up a whole peculiar narrative that seeks to defy all established conventions which pretty much renders Barsha Basanta Baishakha as an eco-feminist text.

References

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feminisminindia.com/2019/12/10/book-review-staying-alive-vandana-shiva. [Accessed 24 Oct 2024]. Web.

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Mehta, Gita. A River Sutra. Penguin UK, 2018. Print.

Mohanty, Gopinath. Amrutara Santana. 1947. 10th ed. Generic publishers, 2018.Print.

Shiva, Vandana. Staying Alive Women, Ecology and survival in India. New Delhi: Women Unlimited Publication, December, 2009. Print.

Warren, K.J. (Ed.). Ecological Feminism. London: Routledge, 1984. Print.

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Published

2025-02-28

How to Cite

Sohi, K. K., & Singh, N. (2025). Barsha Basanta Baisakha: A Text Bridging Women and Nature. Journal of Educational Research and Policies, 7(2), 80–83. https://doi.org/10.53469/jerp.2025.07(02).17

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Articles