Re-reading Female Consciousness and Patriarchal Rationality in Anita Desai's Cry, the Peacock
Keywords:
Female Consciousness, Patriarchal Rationality, Madness, Resistance, Postcolonial Feminism, Stream of ConsciousnessAbstract
This paper examines the representation of female consciousness in Anita Desai's debut novel, Cry, the Peacock (1963), with particular attention to whether Maya's psychological collapse is best understood as pathology or as a coded form of resistance to the structures of patriarchal rationality. Drawing on Michel Foucault's theorization of madness as a socially constructed category, Sandra Gilbert and Susan Gubar's concept of the 'madwoman' as a figure of literary rebellion, and Elaine Showalter's feminist historiography of mental illness, the paper argues that the novel does not simply document one woman's breakdown but opens a much more uncomfortable question: what counts as reason, who decides, and who suffers the consequences of that decision. Desai's deployment of stream-of-consciousness narration, symbolic imagery, and a structurally fragmented narrative amplifies Maya's interiority in ways that resist reductive psychiatric readings. The paper also reads the novel in relation to Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak's reflections on the silencing of the female subaltern, situating Maya's story within the wider context of postcolonial Indian womanhood. The study concludes that Desai's novel performs a radical act of literary witnessing: by giving Maya's 'irrational' voice narrative primacy, it challenges readers to reconsider the binaries of sanity and madness, reason and emotion, submission and agency.



