Publication: Leonard Woolf’s novel The Village in the Jungle from a Feminist Perspective
Type:
Article
Date
2024-12-04
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Faculty of Humanities and Sciences, SLIIT
Abstract
L eonard Woolf’s The Village in the Jungle, published
in 1913, provides a vivid and criti cal depicti on of
life in colonial Sri Lanka (then Ceylon). While the
novel primarily focuses on the harsh realiti es of
the rural community under the colonial rule, it also
off ers signifi cant insights into the gender dynamics
of the ti me. Further, it is largely considered as a
work illustrati ng the severity of colonizati on, the
suff ering of the villagers who had to face up to it,
their fi nal decimati on, and the closing up of the
jungle on the village. Delving deeper into the novel,
one observes the aspect of gender undercurrents
through the behaviour of the villagers, both male
and female. Applying Simone de Beauvoir’s feminist
theory, in an analysis of the conduct of the villagers
concerned, emerge the underlying themes of
patriarchal oppression, resistance, and the struggle
put up by women to gain autonomy. Thereby, the
prominent themes of the novel such as the infl uence
of colonialism in the behaviour of society and a
unique form of feminism that emerges to counteract
it can be refl ected on through the applicati on of de
Beauvoir’s feminist theory to the novel.
Description
Keywords
The Village in the Jungle, Leonard Woolf, Simone de Beauvoir -feminist theory, feminism
