Hello everyone,
This blog is a response to a flipped learning task which is assigned by Dr.Dilip.Barad sir based on Arundhati Roy’s novel ‘Ministry of Utmost Happiness’.
‘Ministry of Utmost Happiness’, Arundhati Roy's novel, is not one that revolves around one story, but rather brings together all the broken stories, allowing them to coexist. The novel weaves together experiences from Old Delhi, Gujarat, and Kashmir.
Anjum, who is a hijra, knits together an unusual home for the unwanted in a graveyard, while Tilo is a strange, quietly strong-willed woman whose life intricately becomes entwined with the politics of Kashmir. What appears to be two disparate stories eventually merges into how individual pain cannot be extricated from the historical past.
This novel is written in a fractured, non-linear style that mixes fiction, politics, memory, and poetry. Rather than providing easy solutions or closure, the novel encourages the reader to bear witness to the ways in which people continue to exist, love, and struggle in a deeply fractured world. This is a very powerful novel about finding small pockets of hope within a sea of despair.
Activity A: The "Shattered Story" Structure (Textual Analysis with ChatGPT)
Narrative Structure and Trauma in The Ministry of Utmost Happiness
Arundhati Roy’s The Ministry of Utmost Happiness resists a conventional, linear narrative. Instead, it unfolds as a fragmented, polyphonic text that moves across time, geography, and subjectivities. This shattered structure is not a stylistic indulgence but a political and ethical necessity. The novel demonstrates how trauma personal, communal, and national cannot be told in a straight line. Roy’s narrative answers the question she implicitly poses: How do you tell a shattered story? Her answer is: by slowly becoming everything.
Non-linearity as a Form of Traumatic Memory
Trauma theory suggests that traumatic experiences are not remembered sequentially but erupt in fragments, repetitions, and sudden returns. Roy mirrors this psychological reality through a non-linear timeline that moves between Old Delhi, Gujarat, Kashmir, and back again, often without smooth transitions.
Rather than beginning with a stable “origin,” the novel opens in the aftermath: Anjum already lives in a graveyard. Only later does the narrative return to her childhood as Aftab in the Khwabgah of Old Delhi. This backward movement reflects how trauma works—the wound is visible before its cause is fully known. The reader encounters the scar before the injury.
From Khwabgah to Graveyard: Spatial Shifts as Trauma Markers
The transition from Khwabgah (House of Dreams) in Old Delhi to the graveyard (later named Jannat Guest House) is one of the most powerful structural movements in the novel.
Khwabgah represents a fragile, performative refuge for hijras already marginal, already provisional.
- The graveyard is not merely a setting but a narrative transformation: a space where the rejected dead and living coexist.
This shift is not linear progression but traumatic displacement. Anjum does not “move forward” in life; she is pushed sideways by the 2002 Gujarat pogrom. The massacre fractures her sense of time and belonging so completely that she exits ordinary social space altogether. Living among graves literalizes what trauma does metaphorically: it places the survivor outside normative time.
Roy does not narrate the pogrom as a single climactic event. Instead, it reverberates across the text, resurfacing in memory, fear, and spatial withdrawal. The graveyard becomes a narrative strategy—a place where broken timelines can coexist.
“Slowly Becoming Everything”: Multiplicity as Narrative Ethics
Rather than centering the novel on one protagonist, Roy allows the story to expand outward, absorbing multiple lives, histories, and conflicts. This is what “slowly becoming everything” means structurally:
The novel begins with Anjum
Shifts to Tilo
Expands to Kashmir
- Absorbs political movements, footnotes, reports, letters, and testimonies
This refusal of narrative hierarchy reflects the ethics of trauma narration: no single story can contain the damage.
Tilo’s Kashmir Narrative: A Parallel Trauma
Tilo’s story in Kashmir does not follow Anjum’s chronologically, but it mirrors her thematically. Kashmir, like the graveyard, exists outside official time as a space of perpetual suspension, surveillance, and mourning.
Roy fractures Tilo’s narrative through:
Letters
Dossiers
Interrogation records
- Interrupted memories
This documentary fragmentation reflects the political trauma of Kashmir, where truth is always partial and violently contested. Just as Anjum survives by creating an alternative world (Jannat), Tilo survives by refusing fixed identity—she remains elusive, resistant to closure.
The Found Baby: Narrative Convergence Without Linear Resolution
The novel’s most crucial structural convergence occurs through the found baby, Miss Jebeen the Second.
Importantly, this connection is not causal but relational:
The baby emerges from the violence of Kashmir
She is carried into Anjum’s graveyard-world
- She becomes the living bridge between two otherwise fragmented narratives
This moment does not “resolve” the novel. Instead, it reconfigures it. The baby represents a future that cannot be narrated through progress or redemption, only through care, improvisation, and coexistence.
Structurally, this is Roy’s ultimate answer to trauma:
Conclusion: A Shattered Nation Requires a Shattered Form
The non-linear narrative of The Ministry of Utmost Happiness reflects the psychic and political trauma of modern India—Partition, communal violence, caste oppression, state terror, and gendered marginalization. Roy refuses linear realism because linear realism belongs to stable nations and coherent histories, which her India is not.
By moving between Khwabgah and graveyard, between Anjum and Tilo, between Delhi and Kashmir, Roy shows that trauma cannot be told—it must be lived across forms. The novel becomes a shelter for fragments, just as Jannat becomes a shelter for the living and the dead.
In this way, The Ministry of Utmost Happiness teaches us not just how to read a shattered story, but how to inhabit one—by slowly, stubbornly, becoming everything.
Activity B: Mapping the Conflict (Mind Mapping with NotebookLM)
Why a Graveyard is the Most Hopeful Place in India: 4 Shocking Truths from Arundhati Roy's Epic Novel
In a world that often feels fractured and hostile, where do we find true connection?
In a society that sorts us into neat, opposing boxes, how do we find not just community, but what one critic calls “un-loneliness” a profound state of belonging among the dispossessed? Arundhati Roy’s epic novel, The Ministry of Utmost Happiness, finds its answer in the most counter-intuitive of places: a graveyard. Twenty years after her debut, Roy returned with a sprawling story suggesting that true paradise isn’t found in purity and order, but in the radical acceptance of the broken. This article explores four of the most impactful truths the novel unearths from its city of the dead.
A Graveyard Becomes a Paradise for the Dispossessed
The novel’s central, paradoxical idea is the Jannat Guest House. Established by the protagonist Anjum—a hijra, or transgender woman—it is a home she builds for herself within the walls of a Delhi graveyard after a traumatic event makes her feel unwelcome in the world. But this is no somber place of death. Instead, it blossoms into what cultural theorists call a "heterotopia"—a real-world liminal space that operates outside society's norms. Here, in this utopian community for the dispossessed, the binary of life and death dissolves.
Slowly, the graveyard becomes a haven for what Roy calls the "fallen peoples." Its residents form a "Noah's ark" of the marginalized: hijras cast out from their communities, Dalits, the poor, homeless, Muslims, and even injured animals find refuge there. The Jannat Guest House redefines "home" not as a physical structure but as a community built on shared experience and mutual support, offering safety and freedom to those denied both. For many in India, living in a graveyard is not a metaphor but a stark reality; in Roy’s hands, this reality is transformed into a defiant paradise.
"the battered angels in the graveyard that keep watch over their battered charges h[old] open the doors between worlds […] so that the souls of the present and departed could mingle, like guests at the same party"
It's a Celebration of "Impurity" Here, Roy leverages the postmodern celebration of "contaminated diversity" to dismantle India's dangerous obsession with purity.
The novel argues that purity is an illusion, a violent fiction used to justify exclusion. Instead, it champions the strength found in our messy, interwoven identities.
"we are contaminated by our encounters […] Everybody carries a history of contamination; purity is not an option."
Roy intentionally brings together characters who defy societal binaries. Anjum represents gender impurity—born with both male and female genitalia, she lives her life as a hijra, a community often perceived as "women trapped in men's bodies." Saddam Hussain embodies caste and religious impurity as a Dalit who converts to Islam. And then there is Tilo, the unconventional architect who represents a profound social impurity. Born out of wedlock to "an untouchable pariah, whereas her mother, a Syrian Christian," Tilo actively rejects society’s stereotypical notions of "marriage, relationships and motherhood." These characters find solidarity not in spite of their differences, but because of them, understanding that the turmoil of the outside world is something they carry within themselves.
"for us the price rise and school admissions and beating husbands and cheating wives are all inside us. The riot is inside us. The war is inside us. Indo-Pak is inside us. It will never settle down. It can’t"
A Man Named Saddam Hussain Becomes a Symbol of Resistance
One of the most startling character arcs is that of Dayachand, a young Dalit man from the chamar (skinner) caste. He witnesses the horrific lynching of his father by a mob of "cow vigilantes," an act of brutality instigated by a corrupt police officer, Sherawat, because his father failed to pay a bribe (a "cut"). This traumatic event, an indictment of both mob violence and state corruption, shatters Dayachand's world.
In an act of profound defiance, he renounces his identity and religion, converts to Islam, and renames himself Saddam Hussain. His inspiration comes from watching the televised execution of the real Iraqi president. He saw a man who, despite being captured and sentenced to death by a global superpower, faced his end with dignity, without begging for his life. For Dayachand, adopting the name of a reviled dictator is not an endorsement of his politics but a personal form of resistance—a way of standing up to the mighty, oppressive local authorities that destroyed his family. The name becomes a shield, turning a symbol of international tyranny into one of personal power against the very forces reflected in the chilling chants of Hindu mobs.
"Mussalman ka ek hi sthan! Qubristan ya Pakistan! Only one place for the Mussalman! The Graveyard or Pakistan"
The Way the Story is Told is Part of the Story Itself
Readers often describe The Ministry of Utmost Happiness as having a "frustratingly rambling" narrative structure. The story is not a linear journey but a "collage of narrative," a "salad bowl" that accommodates a multitude of fragmented voices. This is a deliberate artistic choice. Roy creates a "polyglot verse," incorporating "Urdu, Malayalam, Kashmiri, Hinglish... Whatsapp-lingo, Indian bureaucratese, Shayari, Hindi film songs," and more.
The novel’s form perfectly mirrors its content. By subverting the idea of a single, coherent "grand narrative" told in a hegemonic language, Roy reflects the fractured, chaotic, and multifaceted reality of the world she depicts. The story is shattered because the lives of its characters, and the society they inhabit, are shattered. This forces us, the readers, to piece together a vision of the world from multiple, often conflicting, perspectives—just as the residents of the Jannat Guest House must piece together a life from the broken fragments of their pasts. The book’s own back cover offers the most eloquent explanation of its method.
"How to tell a shattered story? By slowly becoming everybody. No By slowly becoming everything."
The Un-Loneliness of the Broken
Ultimately, The Ministry of Utmost Happiness locates its hope not in perfection or purity, but in the messy, compassionate, and defiant act of coming together. In the graveyard, a space for the dead, the characters discover the profound "un-loneliness" of the living. They find solace and the strength to resist a world that has tried to erase them. By embracing the broken, the marginalized, and the "impure," Roy’s novel builds a powerful monument to the resilience of the human spirit. It leaves us with a critical question: In a world that demands we fit into neat boxes, what power might we find in embracing our own "impurities"?
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