Open Access Open Access  Restricted Access Subscription Access
Open Access Open Access Open Access  Restricted Access Restricted Access Subscription Access

Narrative Gerontology:A Study of Roy's The God of Small Things


Affiliations
1 Department of English, Govt. P.G. College, Jind, Haryana, India
     

   Subscribe/Renew Journal


They had never been shy of each other's bodies, but they never had been old enough (together) to know what shyness was.
Now they were. Old enough.
Old.
A viable die-able age.
What a funny word old was on its own, Rahel thought, and said it to herself: Old.
Subscription Login to verify subscription
User
Notifications
Font Size


  • Byetheway,B.(1995). Ageing. McGrawHill Print.
  • DeMedeiros,K.(2013).Narrative gerontology: Where have we been?Where are we going? Narrative gerontology in research and practice. New York: Springer Publishing Company, 2013, pp. 17-35.Pdf.
  • Encyclopaedia, B. (2016). Old Age. Retrieved November 09 from https://www.britannica.com/science/old-age Web.
  • Markides, U.S., & Mindel, C.H. (1987). Aging and Ethnicity. California: Sage Publications Print.
  • Randall, W. (2010). Memory, metaphor, meaning: Reading for wisdom in the stories of our lives. In G.M. Kenyon, E. Bohlmeijer, and W.L. Randal (Eds.), Storying later life: Issues, investigations, and interventions in narrative gerontology (pp. 20-38). Cary: Oxford University Press, USA.Pdf
  • Roy,A.(199T). The god of small things. London:Flamingo Print.
  • Sokolovsky, J. (2009). The cultural context of ageing: Worldwide perspectives. Westport: Praeger Print.
  • Zeilig, H. (2011). The critical use of narrative and literature in gerontology. The International Journal of Ageing and Later Life, 6(2), 7-37.

Abstract Views: 269

PDF Views: 1




  • Narrative Gerontology:A Study of Roy's The God of Small Things

Abstract Views: 269  |  PDF Views: 1

Authors

Jyoti Sheoran
Department of English, Govt. P.G. College, Jind, Haryana, India

Abstract


They had never been shy of each other's bodies, but they never had been old enough (together) to know what shyness was.
Now they were. Old enough.
Old.
A viable die-able age.
What a funny word old was on its own, Rahel thought, and said it to herself: Old.

References