Asian Anthologies, Part II: The Lotus Singers, Short Stories from Contemporary South Asia
The Lotus Eaters: Short Stories from Contemporary South Asia
Edited by Trevor Carolan
Foreword by Urvashi Butalia
To escape from poverty a woman sells of her body in order to get by.
You鈥檝e heard this story before, haven鈥檛 you? Actually, you haven鈥檛.
Niaz Zaman of Bangladesh鈥檚 story 鈥淭he Daily Woman鈥 is part of one of the new Asian anthologies out by and edited, like Another Kind of Paradise, by Trevor Carolan. This anthology primarily features short stories from the countries of India, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, and Pakistan, but also Bhutan, Nepal, and the Maldives.
Playing on the region鈥檚 rich literary culture and history, old forms take new life. In Zaman鈥檚 story a house worker, a daily woman, reflects back on a choice she made before she was able to find her job. Her husband was sick and the babies came early. What is the price of surviving in Bangladesh? 鈥淗ow hungry she had been, and the two babies crying together were enough to make her go mad.鈥
And then the Amrikans came, pinkish-white people who were willing to solve her problem and take it away, a man and a woman. 鈥淲hite hair and wrinkles near her eyes. And thin. No breasts. No behind. Flat as a dried fish.鈥 The narrator is not impressed, but it would be easier if there were less mouths to feed. So she made the deal and the Amrikans drove away.
鈥淪he sighed and drank the last of her tea. So that was what a Bangladeshi girl child was worth. Two brass bangles. She picked up the boy. Would he have been worth four brass bangles?鈥
Usha Yadav, an Indian writer, also takes a new twist on an old problem. In 鈥淟ibations,鈥 when the widow Saptadal dies during the festival of Holi, her fellow widows travel from door to door to seek men willing to arrange the burial rites for her funeral. When no one can be found three young women, going outside tradition, help the widows perform the burial themselves.
In a subtle (in terms of the story) and less than subtle (in verbatim) commentary on social customs and class divisions, Yadav writes 鈥淣ot an ordinary funeral procession, this was also at once a protest march by women against a selfish and insensitive patriarchy which shadowed the lives of women from the beginning to the end: destroying the female embryo after the ultrasound report and forbidding women to perform the last rites of the dead. At least that is how it seemed to this small group.鈥
The Lotus Singers is an interesting and powerful collection and for those looking for a varied choice of reading and contemporary topics, the anthology has a lot to offer. While on the whole the stories are not as uplifting and positive as Carolan鈥檚 other anthology Another Kind of Paradise, their gritty darkness and at times black introspection give a telling look into South Asian life.

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