Swimming lessons at Rohinton Mistry are obviously nostalgic. It represents a young Persie who moved to Toronto from Mumbai. Narrator portrays similarities between his current life in Toronto and his past life in Mumbai and tried to capture both
With sharp eyes and gentle wisdom, Mist draws a brilliant picture depicting the crowded metropolis, its turbulent life, and the constant tug of war between caring and survival.
The Parsi community is dissatisfied with Mumbai's immigrants. They call poor people, immigrants, and labor society "gatty". Ironically, when Keirsi became "paki", he faced a similar situation in Canada. Kelsey strives to find the dignity of brown immigrants on the land of foreigners.
Everyone in the neighbor knows another thing, and I am exchanging universal gossip. Kelushi is dissatisfied with Mumbai that he still needs to work hard to cope with this social custom. Through Kersi's flashback, readers can clearly understand festivals and celebrations in Mumbai. They advise the talker to crave his culture and traditional comfort
The memory of water does not solve the charm of the narrator. In exact contrast to the clear water of the pool, he remembers the stains of the Chaupatty Sea. However, water in the pool symbolizes distrust and anxiety. It represents a fear of an unknown one
This has a sense that it is a short story about those who are trying to find their own whereabouts in the world. For a narrator who is currently Indian in Canada he now knows his life and remembered his childhood in India and the memories of that place. The interesting thing about this story is that so many memories are related to water. The narrator himself thought about Chau Patty Beach in Mumbai and said, "The image of water in my life will be reproduced."
Learning memory of swimming in Mumbai did not keep India the best. In fact, there is a strange combination of dirty and pure stuff. Because when he swims the children on the street, he has no unique memories of clothes and erections. While his mother tried to teach him how to swim, they masturbated. Therefore India is seen as a memory and childhood, a place where water and dirt flow together, and a rich and fertile place the writer has revisited to incorporate his story.
Barbora Kaprálová, position paper, 17.5. Symbolic significance of the integration of Rohinton Mistry swimming course in 2012 This article focuses on the short story of Rohinton Mistry, author of Canadian Parsi origin. The aim is to disclose some of the symbols for integration used in this story. Born in Pombi community in India in 1952 Rohinton Mistry moved to Canada (Sharmani 27) in 1952. His pedigree made his work a unique perspective for double immigrants. As a Persi, he creates his identity which can be seen as a very specific thing in his story, watching his way in various circumstances. For this confrontation in particular, checking the attitude of Mistry against integration and identity is very interesting. The short story of the swimming course is a very unique insight about the life of a person who lives simultaneously in two reality, or the mediation between Sharmani's "here" and "place", "now" and "past". "(34).
Eleven cross short stories in Rohinton Mistry's "Swimming Course" reside in Parsi residents of Firozsha Baag, a middle and high-rise residential area in Mumbai. In the first book, Mr. Mistrey, an Indian young writer currently living in Toronto, deals with apartment buildings with such small strength. It shows fancy village RK Narayan (author of Mr. Mistory's comparison) extensively The ingenious story about the domestic struggle of a large city residential resident is a terrible flash of the outside world: a community conflict, a murder of a dowry , Prejudice of color