Cultural Identity and Modern Alienation in the Fiction of Arundhati Roy: An Analytical Study
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.64751/n2wft266Abstract
The present study examines the themes of cultural identity and modern alienation in the fiction of Arundhati
Roy with special reference to The God of Small Things and The Ministry of Utmost Happiness. Contemporary
Indian society has undergone rapid social, political, and cultural transformation, and this changing environment
has deeply affected individual identity and emotional stability. Roy’s fiction reflects these tensions through
characters who struggle with isolation, social rejection, fractured relationships, and identity crisis.The major
research problem of the study arises from the growing conflict between traditional cultural structures and the
emotional realities of modern life. In many contemporary societies, individuals experience alienation despite
social progress and modern development. The study therefore attempts to understand how Roy portrays the
psychological and cultural struggles of people living within rigid systems of caste, gender, religion, and political
power. Another important concern of the research is to examine how marginalised individuals become
emotionally disconnected from society while attempting to search for belonging and identity.The objectives of
the study include an exploration of cultural identity in Roy’s fiction, an analysis of modern alienation and
emotional fragmentation, and an examination of the relationship between personal suffering and larger social
realities. The research also focuses on the representation of silence, trauma, exclusion, and displacement in
the selected novels.The study is qualitative and analytical in nature. Textual analysis has been used as the
primary research method. The novels The God of Small Things and The Ministry of Utmost Happiness serve
as the main texts for interpretation. Secondary sources such as literary criticism, journal articles, and theoretical
books have also been consulted to support the analysis. Postcolonial and psychological approaches are
applied to understand the emotional and cultural condition of the characters.The analytical findings of the study
reveal that Roy presents identity as unstable, socially controlled, and continuously shaped by memory, trauma,
caste, and political realities. Characters such as Ammu, Velutha, Estha, Rahel, and Anjum experience different
forms of alienation because they fail to fit within socially accepted structures. Emotional isolation, silence, and
fragmented relationships emerge repeatedly throughout the novels. The study further observes that Roy
portrays modernity not as complete freedom, but as a condition that often increases emotional instability and
social disconnection.The results of the research indicate that cultural identity in Roy’s fiction remains deeply
connected with power, social hierarchy, and emotional experience. Her novels demonstrate how discrimination,
exclusion, and rigid traditions contribute to psychological suffering and identity crisis. The research also
concludes that Roy gives literary voice to marginalised individuals whose experiences are often ignored within
dominant social systems. Through her fiction, she critically examines the emotional consequences of modern
society while simultaneously questioning traditional structures that suppress individual freedom.The study
finally concludes that Arundhati Roy makes a significant contribution to contemporary English Literature by
presenting the complex relationship between identity, alienation, culture, and emotional survival in modern
Indian society.
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