User:Dhruvi 1323/sandbox

Summary
Breast Giver The story was composed by Mahasweta Dev i. The story concentrated on how motherhood transforms into a profession, how the relationships which were subjected to consumerism, and how the issues are showing toward the corrupted position of a female of a general public and it centers around womans' body as question instrument additionally the resource that social norms makes legitimately exploitable. The protective love and support are made up into basic item which were accessible in return of cash. In the entire story, the role of man and woman were switched. The man should be the provider, yet it was the woman who was the provider and the woman should be the compliant and simple one, yet it was the man.

The story the contention emerges from the desire not to serve the world class and after that having conditions that power the individual to do only that. Jashoda is a young lady who uses her breast as a means of production to bring sustenance for her family. An affluent family procures her as a wet nurse and her breast  as subjected to consistant torture due to serving many children at the big house, Haldar Family.Jashoda has all the reasons to not take up this derogatory job.There are such stark divisions in society that offering your milk to children of upper class appears to be a sign of subjugation. The son of that wealthy family had crippled her husband and it was because her husband was not capable of earning that she had to seek a job and circumstances force her to serve the very people who caused her so much pain and misery.

It was difficult for Jashoda to cook food and feed the babied of the big house. The mistress of the big house therefore suggested Jahoda's Husband Kangalicharan to take up cooking instead of Jashoda which will give her time to rest. Later in the story Kangalicharan took up cooking in the temple as well. In the entire story Devi depicts her as having "The Heavy Breasted, sluggish hipped body". She is employed as a nurse and she nurture fifty youngsters, a whole more distant family. The story takes a turn when the children of the Haldar Family grew up and the mistress dies. Jashoda later finds out her husband having an affair with Gopali. Jashoda's condition turned out to be more regrettable and she dies in a hospital with breast cancer.

In the end, Devi sums up Jashoda’s story with the final line, “when a mortal masquerades as a god here below, she is forsaken by all and she must always die alone”. Devi uses the story as indictment of Indian culture and social norms.