Katha Satire

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Katha was far more enjoyable than what I expected before reading my classmates posts. It seems that its message touches not only 80s urban middle-class Indians, but rather exceeded that to be global by showcasing some universal attributes. Katha as Dr. Ghosh suggests “is a satire on the burgeoning Indian middle classes and their conflicted values.” It is interesting that from the beginning of the film when the grandmother tells the popular tale of the hare and the tortoise she says that the idle rabbit these days wins because of his ability to convince people. By “these days” I assume that Paranjpye implies the different social status than the past. Thus, as Jamila, Susan, and Shelby point out in their posts that Bashu, as the lazy rabbit, plays this satirical role in Katha. I think that through Bashu we know that the people of the chawl represented as middle-class are interested in the new modern life by their interest in Bashu himself. Sandhya admires his charismatic personality and confident which is not common in the regular Indians. Her parents are intrigued by him and others are interested in his outstanding stories. His …show more content…

Through Rajaram and Bashu, Paranjpye succeeded to show us how the thought of the perfection in life and complete honesty is not easy and that the easy way to achieve success is to be a lair. Shelby points out “Bashu shows the audience happens when a person completely abandons ethics in favor of personal gain.” However, Jamila sees the realism of the film in its distinct idea about the traditional way of showing that the good guy will win and the bad guy will

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