Women Trying to Find Solutions

Lakshmi Raj Sharma Author Interview

We Should Not All Be Feminists follows two women traveling to India with feminist aspirations who learn the real meaning of feminism from the people they meet there. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?

First let me thank you for giving me the privilege of addressing the readers of Literary Titan through this interview.

Even though no Western feminists, to my knowledge, came to India with feminist aspirations, my interest in the lives of literary theorists like Kate Millett, Rebecca Walker, and others was probably a reason why I constructed such a story. I had read that under the influence of Western feminism, groups such as the Women’s India Association (WIA) and National Council of Women in India (NCWI), West-educated Indians thought in terms of helping Indian women after World War I. This could have been an additional reason for the initial idea of the story.

I have not said that the women who travel to India learn the real meaning of feminism here, but perhaps the reader sees a distinction between fake and genuine feminism because of their visit to India.

Your characters go on a journey of self-discovery in this novel. Were you able to achieve everything you wanted with the characters in the novel?

    The two women find what they want in India. Emelia finds Neville, who had deserted her in America. When she comes to India, she also learns a great deal about rebirth, something she was always interested in. Clarissa finds a woman who she takes to England to help her in more ways than one, both professionally and personally.

    A London literary agent once said that my novel was the reverse of A Passage to India. In that novel, the two women who came to India go back without finding what they had come here for. But in my novel, the two women do get what they have longed for.

    I tried my best to create characters who would be both types and individuals in different parts of the novel. I wanted them to provide humor, seriousness, wit, and satire. I think I achieved those aspects for my novel.

    What were some themes that were important for you to explore in this book?

      I have always loved to write about women. All my earlier books are intimately connected with women’s experiences. I have felt that knowing what a man would feel in a given situation is not enough. It is more important to know what a woman would feel when faced with problems. Similarly, women must know the same regarding men. It is only then that society will be a positive institution.

      The novel reveals the emotional side of two entirely different women, one Brit and the other American. A third woman, an Indian, places herself between these antipodal positions. She escapes from an unpleasant home and finds a kind of freedom that most women would not want. But then that is her fate, the best option she has. A central theme is women trying to find solutions to their problems.
      Another theme results from the magical realism supporting the novel. It relates to lives beyond this present birth in which we are placed.
      [This novel will be an audiobook too by the end of this year.]

      What is the next book that you are working on and when can your fans expect it to be out?

        My next book is From a Writer’s Blog: Facets of the Novel Today. I hope to publish it by the end of 2024, if not earlier. I have compiled my blog posts on fiction or related topics for the decade.

        Writers and students of fiction, which could number millions, are still trying to discover the finer points that cannot be ignored when writing or studying fiction. There are so many books on the theory of the novel and novelists for professors. However, there is quite a void when you think of novelist professors explaining the art and craft of fiction. It is like saying what is shown cannot be stated. Here is a novelist-professor showing what goes on in his mind. This book contains theory, criticism, and the creative process concerning the novel. It also focuses on reading, writing, and publishing the novel today.

        Author Links: GoodReads | X | Facebook | Website | Book Review

        Two women travel to India thanks to their feminist aspirations. The British Clarissa Hatfield is ambitious, but the American Emelia Sedley is genuinely interested in the emancipation of women. In India, they meet a couple, Rajni Kant and Vibha, in a dysfunctional relationship and try to empower the wife. This results in complications for Clarissa and Emelia. To make things more interesting, Emelia’s ex-boyfriend, Neville, arrives from America just as she’s beginning to fall in love with the Indian, Rajni Kant. The novel makes a distinction between genuine and fake feminism. The novel, said a reader, is the reverse of A PASSAGE TO INDIA. The white women who come to India are not disappointed by what this country can give them.
        In this novel, humor and high seriousness take you through the literary tourism of India.



        Posted on November 14, 2024, in Interviews and tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink. Leave a comment.

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