Sunday, May 19, 2019

Pdf Silence! the Court Is in Session †Vijay Tendulkar Essay

Department of humanities and Social Sciences, JNTUACEP,YSR Kadapa (Dist),Andhra Pradesh, India ABSTRACT A criticism against Indian Judicial dodging that the failure of modern reas one(a)d theory and practice lies in its chthonianstanding of what it is to be a human being ass be undoubtedly attri excepted to the themes of Vijay Tendulkars hightail it Silence The salute Is In Session. The coquet barbs against being judicial system at two levels.Firstly, it can be studied as a legal plea which demands for emancipation, par and liberation of women and stresses the need for a friendly transformation of law, culture, and social patterns which release womens potential, where the legal political program has unheeded issues of central concern of women handle rape, domestic violence, reproduction, unequal pay, sex determination and sexual harassment, from Benares case study Secondly, the play can be a thesis on elite-court relations in India as an unsatisfactory arrangement, whe re being structurally part of the state, the courts are expected to maintain a high up degree of independence and to be ensured of a democratic policy.The play is highly relevant as it discusses the render atrocities occurring on women throughout India including Delhi Nirbhaya gang rape case and demands for verdict and bits the elite hostel to ponder on the issue seriously. Key words Judicial system, Unequal treatment, Legal plea, elite-court relations, Play within the playDr. MEDIKONDA SAMBAIAHMrs. KATUMALA SANDHYA bind Received on 26/03/2013 Article revised from 28/03/2013 Article accepted on 28/05/2013The stimulus for Silence The Court is in Session came from a real incident for the writer. Tendulkar met an amateur stem which was on its way to stage a mock- ladder in Vile Parle, a suburb of Bombay. While overhearing their conversation, the define of a play began taking shape in the writers mind and resulted in the universe of Silence The Court is in Session. The play was w ritten for Rangayana at the instance of Arvind and Sulabh Deshpande and was first performed in display 1971 in Madras. When the play was first performed in 1967 for a drama competitionby the small group, it was spurned by the judges who said it was non play. alone later it received The Kamaladevi Chatterpadhyaya award and was translated in fourteen Indian languages. The play was staged all over India in different versions. In a signified Marathi drama represent a place on the theme map and Tendulkar was recognized at the national level. When asked in an interview This play is a caustic satire on the social as wholesome as cleanice.The mental agony suffered by the girl throughout the play is in no way less than the legal punishment. Is that all you102VIJAY TENDULKARS SILENCE THE COURT IS IN SESSION MedikondaSambaiah et alResearch Journal of side of meat Language and Literature (RJELAL) A Peer Reviewed global Journal http//www.rjelal.com wished to air or something more? Te ndulkar said This is exactly what I had in mind. If I say anything else now, that willing be an after-thought. An undaunted girl of Benares make-up could ask, besides defending herself, made acounter-attack , tearing to objet darts the make and donts of the selfish society. Had I shown her aggressive that would hold in been attitude, not hers? Otherwise also the playwright should yet suggest leaving the rest 1 to the viewers.The opening scene of the play turns into a marvellous piece of satire by pitting the self-consciously independent, vehemently assertive, and immensely cheerful Benare against the utterly selfish, hypocritical and venomed amateur artists and paves the way as to how they are going to judge and reverse the natural justice. The scene depicts how an average out middle class charr strives and struggles for preserving her womanhood and motherhood and her thirst to be accepted by the society. As the curtain rises, Samant, a local chap and Leela Benare, the heroi ne are found conversing. She springs a surprise on the inelegant Samant with a sudden confidential proposal Lets leave everyone behind, I thought, and go someplace far, far, away with you Silence The Court is in 2 Session. When she makes this observation, she has Professor Damle in her mind. Benare, after telling Samant that the school centering is holding an enquiry against her just because of one bit of slander. 58 The depiction of unsecured condition of Benare explores the problems that exist among Indian women towards legal rights and her absence of awareness round legislations and their enforcement and inadequacies of legal provisions.The tragic and bottle neck same situation reminds the audience of Banavari Devi, Nina Sahni, Tasneem Sheikh Suhail, Delhi model Jessica Lal and Nirbhaya claims Vijay Tendulkar as a man of relevance to the contemporary society, where the practices like eve teasing, whistling at girls, bottom pinching and are common phenomenon among Indian y oungsters, apart from big incidents like gang rapes and murders. The purpose why the dramatist has selected different persons from different backgrounds can give some clues about the judicial clan and theirVol.1.Issue.1.2013judicial culture. In fact, all these characters are the re demoatives of the existing personalities in judicial circle with their personal, familial, educational, ethical and professional defects. Mrs. Kashikars, Sukhatme, Balu Rokde, Gopal Ponkshe and Karnik are the various typical personalitiesin judicial circle. The very fact of Mrs. Kashikars collusion in the attack on Benare demonstrates how women internalize the dominance of men over themselves as a natural phenomenon and turn against other transgressing women as the other. Had Benare been the economically power, she might have protested more busyly. Her present position is evidence that among educated women, concern for status has a positive relationship with age and employment. It has been found that th e working educated women have higher concern for status than the non-working women or house wives.The commencement of the Mock-trial, which constitutes a play-within-the-play, offers Tendulkar ample scope to dissect and lay bare the dormant ills of discontent in the psyche of these urban hypocrites. Though, they gang themselves up against a hapless Benare for the time being, they have nothing but spite for one another. Rokde symbolizes lumped public which is enveloped in the culture of dependency and carried away by the lures of money, power and threat. Throughout the play, he is not allowed enough time to exercise his intelligent challenges to prospective jurors.Ponkshe and Karnik are the other two catalysts who have their active usance in the plot against Benare. When Benare goes into the inner room to wash her face, Karnik takes Ponkshe aside and indicating the inner room into which Benare has just gone, tells him if he knows anything about her About her, About Miss. Benare. Rok de told me. The stylistic gimmicks used by Ponkshe and Karnik sometimes speak a lot louder than the words they actually speak. As witness their technique is not to argue the case but to present the issues.These two people represent the educated elite in the society, who have to demand for order of proof as yardstick before asking the board to measure the complaint. But these people miss the logical order of proof for their expert testimony. The interrogatory procedure is so convincing that the legal professionals have been encouraging litigation more and more by giving impetus to disputes. There is a far-flung belief both among litigating public and legislators, the intervention of lawyers in court103VIJAY TENDULKARS SILENCE THE COURT IS IN SESSION MedikondaSambaiah et alResearch Journal of English Language and Literature (RJELAL) A Peer Reviewed International Journal http//www.rjelal.com proceedings have the built-in tendency to delay the disposal of cases. The legal profession is no longer service-oriented but profit-oriented. Sometimes lawyers on both sides join hands to make both the parties via media even if the clients have to suffer the loss. Majority of the lawyers harass their clients for more and more fee, false bills, while not taking the required interest in the case. In all his arguments there is no ethical globe of evidence. He indulges simply in word games and forgets the joint liability of Damle. All these things show that Mr. Sukhatmes role in the play is a replica of the legal professionalism and an evidence of how there is a fall in efficiency and standard at the Bar and which is on the verge of collapse.In a perceptive outline of justice, gender and the justice in American society, Deborah Rhode observed Without a fundamental reordering of cultural values, women cannot want to secure true equality, and social status. In that constructive enterprise, law can play a meek but more effective 4 role. This is more so in Indian society wi th a high level of illiteracy and strong traditions of gender inequalities. That is what happens in Benares case. Certainly, the play Silence The Court is in Session is a question against existing legal curriculum. There is no roadmap for the image of candor in the procedure of the prosecution. There is an absence of trial dynamism in the play. The entire trial rotates virtually gimmick but is not based on evidence. There is no opening statement which tells to the jury the plaintiff claims in a direct and reasonable way.It must give the jury an overview of what the evidence will show and what the evidence will be without argumentative hype and individualistic exhibitionism. Missing direct or cross examination ruthlessly rules out the fundamental rules of natural justice i.e. no body can be a judge in his own cause and no body should be condemned inaudible. The foundations for the verdict let the witness be himself is not at all observed. There is no reexamination of the evidence offered by both sides.The judge rules based on what the lawyer presents. It seems that instructions to jurors will without delay affect their judgment. The doctrine of 5 locus standi, a principle that the judicial time as headspring as energy ought not be wastedover hypothetical or abstract questions, has been neglected and the truth that the trial is the time of decision and the moment of truth has been gained and gathered, assessed, weighed and measured for hours together in the enter room.Vol.1.Issue.1.2013Vijay Tendulkar who is acclaimed as articulatory of violence in the modern Marathi theatre brings another dimension of the ruthlessness in the play. He demands that the concept of cruelty is to be delimitd along with the socio-economic changes in the society. The playwright proves how it could be possible that cruelty was intentionally aimed at by the provisions of the law itself. It seems that he joins with radical criminologists in seeking to redefine harm in the crimin ological arena of victimology. Similarly, the playwright focuses on the maleness of legal proceedings, specifically the trial of sexual crimes like abortion and pre and extra marital relationships. Simply, in trials the procedure is designed to break run through the story of the woman complainant both by subjecting it to vigorous doubt and by implicitly serializing it.The victim becomes an object of the male gaze and forced to relieve her ordeal, which itself becomes another assault. In the play, it is very clear that the exploration of body and sexuality is done through fierce and bold debate by the testimonies of Balu Rokde and Karnik. Tendulkar poses another strategic question to the legal provisions of women in India. If the child is a legitimate one, the father is honoured with the guardianship of the child. But if the child is illegitimate the mother is the guardian, and she alone has to bear the stigma and humiliation of every day social pin-pointing as well as the respons ibility of bringing up the child. The law makes no distinction amid legitimate and illegitimate child when it imposes on the father an obligation to maintain 6 children.But if it is under the guardianship of the mother, the man escapes everyday disgrace by merely paying the maintenance amount, at the close to To put it briefly, the law recognizes the patriarchal system of family in which father 7 supreme. Doubtlessly, it is the supreme talent of the dramatist that the violence of the play is superbly sugar-coated with the technique of play within the play. Without this technique Tendulkarcould not have made his characters directly attack Benare on the charge of infanticide. The play is widely acclaimed for this technique. Dnyaneshwar Nadkarni pays a tribute to the play Silence The Court is in Session comes as a turning point in Tendulkars career. It has a play in rehearsal and a real-life story, and the two intertwine to produce some out-of-the-way 8 confrontations.104VIJAY TENDU LKARS SILENCE THE COURT IS IN SESSION MedikondaSambaiah et alResearch Journal of English Language and Literature (RJELAL) A Peer Reviewed International Journal http//www.rjelal.com However, Tendulkar depicts Benare as a modern 9 woman who is capable of protecting herself and 9 her body in a male dominated society . He does not let Benare kill herself or feel shy about the whole episode, but makes her fight till the end. Apart from all the criticism as she faced in the play, the character of Benare form as a lovely spark from the thunderbolt of Tendulkar, in the Modern Marathi theatre. She is a new woman pleading for freedom from social and legal norms. Even though Tendulkar 10 said that writing this play was drudgery to him, the credit of raising him to the top of the Indian theatre goes to this play Silence The Court is in Session.Vol.1.Issue.1.2013REFERENCES1. Vijay Tendulkar. Drama The Most Difficult, But the Most Powerful Medium. wonders with Indian Writers, New World Literat ure Series, B-18, p.280 2. Vijay Tendulkar. collect Plays in Translation Silence The Court is in Session, translated by Priya Adarkar, New Delhi, Oxford University Press, 2003, p.55. 3. Quoted in System on the Verge of Collapse, India Abroad , New York, February 4, 1994.4. Deborah Rhode. Justice, Gender and the Justice in Crites Lawra L, and Hepperle Winifred L (eds), Women, The Courts and Equality. 1978, p.10. 5. itinerant Mukherjee. Women, Law and Free Legal Aid in India, Deep & Deep Publications Pvt. Ltd., New Delhi, 1998, p.64. 6. Sect. (2), Adoptions and The Hindu nourishment Act, 1956. 7. Ved Kumari. Place of Women and Child in Guardianship in Lotika Sarkar and B. Sivaramayya (eds), Women and Law Contemporary Problems Vikas PublishingHouse Pvt. Ltd. New Delhi, 1994, p.242. 8. Sudhir Sonalkar. Vijay Tendulkar and the Metaphor of military group, The Illustrated Weekly of India, November 18-24, 1993, p.20. 9. Veena Noble Dass. Women Characters in the Plays of Tendulkar, New D irections in Indian Drama (ed) Sudhakar Pandey and Freya Barva, Prestige publications, New Delhi, 1994, p.11. 10. Vijay Tendulkar. Interview, The Indian Literary Review, Vol.I, p.12.105VIJAY TENDULKARS SILENCE THE COURT IS IN SESSION MedikondaSambaiah et al

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