Reviewed by Jayanthi Manoj
Book: Guilt Trip and other Stories
Author: Lakshmi Kannan
Year: 2023
Pages: 236
Price: ₹ 395 INR
ISBN: 978-93-91125-74-5
Lakshmi Kannan's Guilt
Trip and other Stories is an experience of food, emotions and
relationships that make our everyday life. Less jargoned but treats with ample
servings of the native flavours of Tamil and Kannada glossary, the 13 stories
capture the innateness of the South-Indian sensibility. One
can quickly relate with the ‘amma’ and ‘Patti’ of the Tamilian home space.
Kannan’s characters are closely real, simple and
relatable. She handles the varied human expressions of care, guilt, jealousy, helplessness,
loneliness and adventure with utmost authenticity. A woman who tries to tell
what she needs can be seen as improper, but these stories navigate through the
feminine terrains to find ways to voice it out. They are insightful and delve
into the social behaviour that reflects the diverse worlds in which a woman is
born into and the world which she creates as an evolved one.
The Guilt trips…
Guilt Trip… is a journey of characters that move from
stereotypical characters who satisfy the kitchen roles to prototypes like young
researchers and University Professors who find ways to balance the ladle and
pen. The normalized role of women essentially is to cook and serve. This
qualifying act is vividly discussed in ‘Dregs’. Sheila, “recalled her sisters-in-law
in Tamil Nadu who slaved all day in a sooty kitchen, cooking elaborately for a
large extended family” (56).
The drudgery of serving food is not because of the act of
service but lack of value and affirmation that is due to a woman who eternally
serves food in the household. Kannan clearly rips open the hierarchy and
insensitivity that is normalised in this everyday ‘service-ritual’ that is
religiously repeated without any consideration left for the women who slog in
the kitchen. Sheila’s sisters-in-law went to bed half hungry. “Then they got up
the next day to repeat the same work, cooked large meals, ate leftovers and
went to bed hungry. The next day and the next… it was understood as a very
normal thing for women” (57). Food has a prominent presence in this anthology
highlighting subtly gender roles and gender non-conformity.
Sheila is a young researcher in a new land acing with her
pen but pursued for the ladle. The male-colleagues did not come to check on her
research themes, but on her kitchen. Dregs is a powerful symbol which signifies
that a woman is a remnant of something left unworthy. Be it in Leeds or in her
own hometown, Sheila is not questioned about her research pursuit, but she has
to answer a lot of typical questions such as how would her husband manage food
in her absence unmindful of the academic journey that she had voyaged to make
it to the Leeds.
‘Dregs’ is a powerful meta story on the politics of cooking.
Sheila is a prototype of a ‘thinking-woman’ who “…sleeps with monsters” as in Adrienne
Rich’s ‘Snapshots of a daughter-in-law’ as opposed to the stereotype of
‘serving-woman’. Women’s place and role in the kitchen is an undercurrent theme
that is recurrent in varied narratives in ‘The Colour Green’, ‘Ladies Watch’, ‘Kitchen
fire’ and ‘VRS’ apart from ‘Dregs’. These stories are a wake-up call of changed
roles of women who in spite of embracing their femineity can be women who start
to think for themselves without the ‘guilt-trip’.
‘VRS’ is a voice call to empower the society that has to
handle an empowered woman. An empowered woman is on a different realm, a
separate genre, by herself as against the common given whom the world and
household are familiar with. She is even part of the gossips among women who
have not yet made their inner journey a celebration of sisterhood, and find
ways to go by the heart's content.
Plating for food in the South Indian cuisine is more of
serving. Serving food is a main ingredient in the Tamil cuisine. The ethos
behind serving food is to serve the cooked food with love and care. It is
believed it adds flavour to the food and the people who eat have the stomach
and heart content. With family roles, many a time unconsciously ‘Serving’ has
become a mark of ‘Servitude’. Women are designated to serve rather than be obliged
to serve. Arundhati’s decision to go for a VRS is a backlash or a proactive
response of a ‘thinking woman’ who no longer is willing to be exhausted in acts
of servitude.
Arundhati is an answer to the kitchen politics, a proactive
woman who stands up for herself and who echoes what Lakshmi Kannan has noted in
the beautiful quotation of Maya Angelou, “Each time a woman stands up for
herself, without knowing it, possibly, without claiming it, she stands up for
all women”. That is so beautifully brought out in Arundhati's character wherein
she, even directly tells her helper, Rooparani, to stash away a little food for
themselves and should not serve it even if they had to fall short of food
that's put on the table. When we defy a stereotype, we need a model, a
prototype to follow. Arundhati without guilt is Kannan’s model of an empowered
woman who stands up for herself. She decides that she would no longer be
exploited for her goodness, goodwill and resources, including finance and food.
There is a strong message beneath the subtle stories that
food need not be just delegated only to the womenfolk and can be a shared
endeavour. Kannan brings out the beauty of the shared endeavour in ‘Kitchen
Fire’ where there are instances of Padma and her husband Raghuraman in spite of
her heavy schedule and his ailment seamlessly make it as an act of mutual-respect
to honour each other’s need. There are days Padma makes time to make food for
her sick husband amidst her precious work as a fellow in IIAS Shimla. There are
times when Raghuraman helped her with dinner, made her tea after she had a
tired day and was sensitive enough to warn her against Namakkal, Chengalpattu
and Thittakudi who awaited a dinner invitation for home-food unmindful of
Padma’s hectic schedule. Raghuraman becomes a prototype of an empowered man,
evolved to be sensitive enough to respect and be emotionally available for an
empowered woman as his wife unlike Arun in ‘VRS’. It has to be noted that Kannan's
stories are not only exclusively rich with the female experience but also
present men capable of respecting and reaching out to women with sensitivity
such as Ragurahman in ‘Kitchen Fire’ and the well-dressed man in ‘As Dapper as
They come’
The success of Guilt Trip… could be if every reader
can take time to check on people, irrespective of the gender, who serve them
food every day with a simple note of affection, “Did you eat?” It can be the
man and woman in the kitchen, a family member or friend who waits on you to
serve, a road-side dabbawalla, a hotel server or anyone, that would be an
enhancement of the human spirit with an act of kindness and affirmation. Food represents
the culture of a place and is also the emotion of a household.
Stories on women’s roles in ‘Addigai’, the girls’
adventures in ‘Guilt Trip’, woma(e)n’s day out in ‘Annapurna Bhavan’ are
interesting reads on a woman’s mindscape. ‘Adiggai’ speaks about the zero
tolerance for women who are seriously devoted to careers of their own or women
who pursued higher studies. The conflict among the submitted self and the
evolved is strongly reflected in ‘Adiggai’.
…And
other Stories
Kannan’s collection also has a menu of other stories that
surprises the reader with the soul’s journey and transience in ‘The Open Gate’
and ‘Floating Free’, aching for an apple and discovering the native flavour of
‘Guava’ in ‘’A’ for Apple’ and the love and value of the geriatric population
in ‘Janaki turns a Blind Eye’
‘The Open Gate' has an ethereal essence,
deep and gripping other-worldly insight. When the soul is ready to leave,
nothing can stop it. The best is to prepare the way for it to comfortably leave
the body of pain. The soul never dies, it only leaves… is the crux of the
opening story of this collection. One can visualize the soul's passage to the
next dimension through the gates as Mr. Subramanium wanted it to be open for a
seamless journey. As a
show-but-don’t-tell narrator, Kannan states the voice of the soul. The song and gate are
signs of getting ready. The song is a symbol of celebration of a life lived,
and the gate is a symbol of transition to the next dimension. The soul lives,
gets ready to live in another time space. The spiritual transcendence prompted
by the comforting humming bird in ‘Floating Free’ is another instance of the
transience of life.
Geriatric themes, abound in many of Kannan’s writings. She
many a time touches upon the fear and loneliness of the old and sends a strong
reminder to embrace the aged with love. Janaki
is portrayed as an endearing one who has the power to stand with goodwill
towards the young bride in 'Janaki turns a blind eye'. Hope permeates the story
that otherwise captures with wry humour the plans to plunder the newly wed. ‘The
Colour Green’ and ‘Ladies Watch’ unveils instances of insensitivity and
thoughtlessness of the grown-up children towards their aging parents.
In Lakshmi Kanan’s collection the simple
is no ordinary, but envelops layers of meanings which open up the varied roles
of typecasts, stereotypes, prototypes with varies perspectives, ideas and
customs. A recommended read to journey into our very own homes and identities
where we struggle to be and become the best version, we are capable of.
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