During the intense political turmoil in Sri Lanka, Arjie experienced a particularly bitter journey during the maturity of Shyam Selvadurai's funny boy. Most of the adults of the Arjie family belong to an older, conservative generation that is trying to incorporate Arjie into social norms. Through his family Arjie's family in the community was a person who urged him to see his childhood boundary, and Arjie's companion gave him more understanding of himself. Under the guidance of his big family, his grown friends, and his associates, Arjie was able to discover his identity by understanding the influence of the race ... Read more
Like Ammachi, she was sometimes confident of herself when Amma tried to help Arjie on a mature trip. Before Arjie dressed in Sally, Amma was asking him to play with her jewels and see her wear her sally. But after the humiliation of Arjie, Amma ordered Diggy to play with the boys within the time spent by Arjie and forbade Arjie and his wife's cousin to play bride and bride together with him. When Arjie questioned this, Amma simply said "You are a big boy now, this big boy needs to play with other boys" (20). This is not supposed to satisfy Arjie as he has not yet been affected by social expectations. Because she does not know how to cope with the gender problem, Amma said, "Life is full of foolish things, sometimes even this has to be done" (20). Arma is also resentful about explaining racial discrimination to Jie Jie as well. When Arjie was disappointed that an English tutor did not marry the king and me, Amma said to Arjie that people will not marry except for their own race (54). Later on, Arjie learned that her mother was more receptive. After Radha Aunty was rigorously tested on the attacked train, Amma was the only person who called Anil "poor" (87). As her best friend and neighbor are Sinhalese, Amma welcomes people of different races. Indeed, when she was young, she fell in love with Bharher Daryl Uncle. My uncle Darryl
Shyam Selvadurai 's novel "Funny Boy" shows the growth of Sri Lankan youth, homosexuals, Tamil boys Arjie. This novel is exploring the barriers surrounding love, marriage, gender expectations and cultural tension in the context of Sri Lankan social and cultural politics in the population of Sinhalese and Tamils in the 1980s. The tension and change in Sri Lanka in the black July case of the 1980s was similar to the development of homosexual identity by Aja himself
Arjie 's journey in a strange boy at Shyam Selvadurai grew up during the fierce political turmoil in Sri Lanka, and Arjie walked a particularly bitter and mature journey with Shyam Selvadurai' s funny boy. Most of the adults of the Arjie family belong to an older, conservative generation that is trying to incorporate Arjie into social norms. - ... At the end of this chapter Arjie's view on love and beauty revolutionized through his aunt's "Life of Love". Ajie continued: "I will happen in the way I dreamed, but I am not happy because I know that there are several missing people.If they love each other, everything will be Is possible
In the original story of a funny boy of Shyam Selvadurai, the story character Arjie was fascinated by the idea of romance, love, and marriage. This interested determined much of his childhood and made it possible for him to discover and understand the more serious aspects of his life such as his homosexuality and political tension in his hometown. In his grandparents' house, Arjie played the "Bride-Bride" game. There, he pretended that his cousin and all the girls' cousins were well prepared and made a wedding ceremony. In the world they made, sex did not go well up to the fat of her most recent cousin who came back from abroad. She insists that "a boy can not become a bride, a girl must be a bride," and forces the role of gender in the ideal world of "bride - bride" (11). In this way, the adult world enters the world of pretending to be a child and asks them to play in social ways appropriate.