The Big Heart


For the 1947 film that was originally released in the United Kingdom as the Big Heart, see Miracle on 34th Street.

The Big Heart [1] is a novel written in 1945 by Mulk Raj Anand, Indian novelist. It is one of his novels, among Untouchable (1935), Coolie (1936), The Village (1939), Across the Black Waters (1939), The Sword and the Sickle (1942), The Private Life of an Indian Prince (1953). The theme of the novel is the conflict between hereditary copper smiths and the capitalists. It is a novel about a village of artisans in Amritsar District in the early 1940s whose livelihood is destroyed by the establishment of a factory producing copper utensils.

About the Author

Mulkraj Anand (1905–2004) was born in Peshawar of Pakistan and educated at university of Punjab and London. After the war, he settled in Mumbai.

Characters and Places of the Novel

Story of the Novel

The story of the novel, takes place in Amritsar town. The man with a big heart, Ananta, who has had the experience of participating in the Gandhian struggle for freedom in Bombay, arrives in Amritsar. By this time, the situation in Amritsar is already explosive and chaotic. It becomes more intensive and violating with Ananta's arrival in the town.

The cause behind all this, is that, two Chowdaries - Muralidhar and Gokul Chand set up a factory, which has rendered the local coppersmiths jobless and hopeless. Though Ananta supports the cause of the coppersmits, he has faith in the power of modernity and efficiency of machines. Ananta, while coming from Bombay, accompanies a woman, Janaki, and keeps her as his mistress and enjoys romance. But she is slowly dying of Tuberculosis.

Satyapal, Puran Bhagat Singh, and Ralia all play their role in the struggle against the capatalists in their own way. Ananta's Gandhian approaches are unwelcomed. Ralia, in his utter madness kills Ananta, hitting his head against a machine repeatedly. The story ends with the machine emerging the winner over human.

References

  1. The Big heart, a novel by Mulk Raj Anand, London, New York [etc.] Hutchinson international authors Ltd. [1945]

External links