I can't help leaving my comment because your lecture has brought tears in my eyes. May be it sounds hyperbolic but it's true. I know ma'am being a woman you realise each and every word of Kamala Das which is expressed throughout your lecture. Being a woman I too can realise it . I can realise this poem,the situation of women which is still kind of unchanged and universal and our struggle........ I don't know how to express my feeling,what to write. I have been just pausing the video again and again and overwhelming. Really you're a real example of "Madam" ,how honest your lectures are ! Hats off Madam , I feel very lucky to come across you through internet. You're one of my inspiration .😌🙏
God you have an immense talent of teaching and explaining things which is not something many people can do. The video lesson was really helpful. Thank you so much and Keep up the good work.
I have seen so many of your lectures. What amazes me the most is the fact that you never impose your personal thoughts or biases on any of the characters. You Never pass judgments even though you teach with so much passion! Respect.
The beauty of this poem is that it is very relatable. We may not have those congenial experiences but somehow our suffering unites us all. I particularly find it very appealing that Kamala Das does not only embolden the concept of feminism but also the ideas of individuality and freedom regardless your gender. And lastly, an amazing explanation by you ma'am. Thank you so much for making a video on this masterpiece.
34:18 Correction. I am a psychology student, what you described here is actually DID (Dissociative Identity Disorder) and not schizophrenia. Schizophrenia is complicated but for the sake of explanation, I'll oversimplify it, it is where the person has hallucinations. They could be visual, auditory, sensations etc. Delusions are also a part of it. To learn more about DID, I recommend Anthony Padilla's video : I spent a day with MULTIPLE PERSONALITIES (Dissociative Identity Disorder). For schizophrenia, you could refer to CrashCourse.
I have my sessional examination tomorrow and gone through the text throughly but your explanation is like cherry on the cake ❤️. Thank you Ma'am . Please keep uploading such videos (if possible of every text 🥺) , we remain hungry of your explanation🤧
This explanation really helps to me for understanding the whole poem. 💖It likes that Kamala Das the writer herself is describing the poem as her to me. I am very thankful to you mam for giving us such an incredible explanation of this poem. 🙏
You are a real role model for all teachers for conveying any complex ideas in a simplified manner. Superb ma'am. Fell love with your class. Expecting more lectures from you🙏🙏🙏🙏
Happy evening ma'am You are a living goddess of literature to me❤❤. I have listened to this lecture just now. I enjoyed this lecture thoroughly. I felt like I was listening to Kamala Das when I listened to this poem. I am at a loss for words to thank you. I cannot express my gratitude by using the word "thank you ". I really enjoyed this lesson. Your lectures are filled with great essence and interpretations. I love the way that you interpret all the poems.. Kudos to you ma'am. Your sessions are a feast to me. I love to watch all your sessions. I started enjoying literature by watching your videos ma'am. I can't help writing my comments for you..Lots of love for you from Tamilnadu ma'am. Thank you soooooooooooooooo much ma'am ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
It's a masterpiece ❤.. Never had such amazing learning experience before.. Thank you for giving us this enlightning experience. I feel blessed to have found you on UA-cam.❤
Good Afternoon Ma'am. At the very beginning I express my heart-felt gratitude for your efforts. At the same time I have a few questions. It will be very kind of you, if you may clear my doubts. 1. At the very beginning when the poet says she knows no politics, yet knows the name of those in power, may this be interpreted as a kind of verbal irony in the sense she says she has no knowledge, yet she has knowledge? She is proving their presupposition of woman's ignorance wrong? 2. While speaking about are lingual identity, she says she speaks in three languages. I read that she has spent a considerable period of her childhood in Calcutta. So, is it possible that she knew Bengali as the third language, in place of Hindi? 3. While explaining you said dream has a language of its own. What is that language? She says she dreams In one. What kind of language is it? Kindly elaborate. 4.Again you said that her English was a challenge to the Colonial masters as well as the society. Most probably because the colonial masters will understand only if written in English. But isn't it strange, that to challenge the authority , one has to learn the language of the authority, only then she can challenge? They never try to learn our language for a change. Though the English she uses is an Indianized one. But still English. Also, in the Indian society of her time, a handful of the population actually new the language. In their case, they even do not know they are being challenged. 5. She was contrasting her language from the sounds of trees, monsoon clouds, rain funeral pyre. Apart from these sounds being unaware or enlightened like human speech, can these be interpreted as different states of Indian women? For example, tress in face of storm may symbolize women who are taught to face all difficulties single handedly and silently ? They are like trees, who silently suffer all storms of life and never complain? Or the pregnant Monsoon cloud which are like women who have thousand emotions pent up in their hearts, but are prohibited to express? The rain may symbolize their silent tears, or even if loud enough for others to hear, they do not actually listen or try to understand the reason of her tears? As for the funeral pyre, it might symbolize the practice of Sati or it might also be representative of women who silently die everyday before they express themselves, where the fire in her heart is silenced? 6. She asked for love. May we also interpret this as an adolescent's demand for care and attention as common in her age, but she is given away in marriage instead out of their own misinterpretations? 7.She was protesting against the categorizers. But isn't she herself categorizing again while saying, he is everyman who wants a woman, Or in the sense of universalizing herself with every woman and vice versa? She is categorizing men in their pre-supposed nature like river and so the women in their pre- supposed nature as ocean. 8. In the lines: "I ask each and everyone,/ the answer is, it is I. Anywhere and/ Everywhere, I see the one who calls himself I;" Here she uses the term "himself" .So, is she referring to men or male "I" in these lines? And in a way she trying to say the in patriarchy only men have identity. They had the right to call themselves I. And she is establishing Her identity as well as that of all women Through the Female I in the last lines. As if saying , Like a man I too feel. A woman feels too. She to is an human being just like the man is; No difference, in no way is she inferior when she says " I too call myself I"? 9. In case of using schizophrenia, was she really suffering from that disorder or was she using it to refer to her identity crisis, her search for "I" in patriarchal society which the latter stamped as her disorder? In the sense that she was asking something which is not acceptable and unthinkable in society, her individual identity? 10. In the course of your explanation, you were talking about sin as something defined by religion, not by law. Its not logically proved and no crime. The 7 deadly sins according to Christianity or the 6-' Ripus', then what are these rules against moral excesses created for? Some baseless impositions? Can a question of morality be relative?. But if everyone defies that, irrespective of genders, what will happen? Will there be a chaos or anarchic condition, a fall of moral order though that order is made my people themselves? for themselves? 11. Ma'am, I am curious to know what is the origin of this institution of patriarchy. We say so much about without knowing the roots. Like every other things it must also have a beginning? How did all these start? 12. Kamala Das 's initial response to patriarchy was defying her womanliness. What is this 'femininity' or 'womanliness'.? What is feminism? Is it blindly aping or imitating the men in power or the patriarchal power? Or is it creating my own individuality and recognizing we all are human irrespective of our gender, recognizing humanity above all? For example, smoking is injurious to health. But some start smoking as a symbol of defying patriarchy based on a stereotyped or traditional concept that Men smoke. So we are no less. Even in movies we see. It might also be normal addiction for most with no such thought as well. A matter of pure choice. But if a protest, Isn't it strange way of protesting? If he jumps in well, I too shall jump to show my equal status. Or indirectly aren't we somewhere admiring and accepting and trying to follow the ways we mark as domain of man in the apparent guise of protest? What is the essence of feminism? And I am also curious about the word 'woman'. Does it refer to one who woos a man? And finally, I want to put forward a request for classes on The Merchant Of Venice, Dr. Faustus, and Canterbury Tales if possible. These will help me in my semester, Thank you Ma'am.
Your question deserves time. I will definitely try to address the questions. Just give me some time. Needless to say, i am thoroughly impressed by your questions and look forward to answering them.
I will try to address your questions serially. 1. Women had no knowledge of politics; they only knew the headlines. Hence only the names of the prime ministers were familiar to them. At the same time, it was reality that women were poorly represented in politics despite figures like Indira Gandhi looming large. 2. She is not very specific. The third language might have been Hindi, Kannada or even Bengali. 3. Dream, like cinema, has its own language. When we dream it is not any one language but a super-lingual sensory experience. Dreams are made of the sum-total of our life experiences, embedded in our deep sub-conscious. So, this language of dream is a unique one. 4. To win a battle you need to use the weapons matching the ones that your opponents use. So is the case with language here. It was important for her to be understood first. So, she uses the language only to use it as her weapon. 5. Kamala Das's imagery is always pregnant with the potential of multiple interpretation. I really like the way you see it. As you have observed that, the imagery she mentions are, despite being sounds, somewhat like silence. Here, she tries to establish that unlike these, her voice is eloquent. If you are equating these images with silent women, then Kamala Das is asserting her difference from these women. 6. To some extent yes. But even if she asked for sexual love, natural in the age of curiosity, she gets confinement and no companionship. She is hitting at the way in which love and sex is associated with duty and matrimony in Indian culture. Woman's desire is seen as something obnoxious and taboo. 7. No. The moment she universalizes herself, she is breaking the stereotypes. She is both sinned against and sinner, both saint and fallen. So, she puts herself outside narrow boundaries of defined categories. 8.She deliberately chooses "himself", because she was talking first about “every man”. Then she makes the lines fuse into a universal idea of humanity. She begins by talking about male symbols (sword in a sheath) but fuses into female ones (dies with rattle, meaning female infanticide). She feels that the pronoun I is a unifying thing. It is asserting her identity and equality. 9. She was diagnosed. You may read her autobiography "My Story". She was even hospitalized for this problem. She used to be on bromides and other drugs to treat her condition. 10. Rules and laws and moralities are created to stabilize a structure, a system, an institution. They conform to the establishment. Rules can be beneficial for sustenance. And resistance and revolution always create chaos. See for instance divorce, and live-in relationship, and acceptance of the LGBT community can be seen both as a problem (e.g. property rights and inheritance, surname, professional status, gender-based facilities) and an opportunity. Chaos is necessary for cosmos. Yes, morality is relative. Often people use morality as an excuse for subjugation. Look at the way in which traditional religion has defined a morally good woman as opposed to a morally good man and you will see the double standards. 11. It all started right when society did. Back in the Mesopotamian Age I suppose. Read Gerda Lerner's book on the Origin of Patriarchy. I will make a video some day on this. 12. This question can not be answered in UA-cam comment section. It demands a full-fledged class which I will take I guess since many students are showing interest in feminism. It was wonderful answering you. Hope to have more such questions in future. God Bless.
@@NibblePop Thank you ma'am for your blessing and for clearing my doubts. I will surely search and try to read the book. I look forward to more such videos. ☺
This is first class with you ma'am... I will talk to you i don't meet any such a grateful class before..... I think if i am following your every class than not need any tuition ♥️💓💓 thank you ma'am.. Thanks a lot♥️♥️
Thank you mam for your beautiful explanation of the poem on An Introduction.Mam whenever I lisiten to this poem I feel that this poem is not a mere poem by Kamala Das but it is a poem about a patriarchal society and how they treat women as an object.Mam when ever I read this poem I felt that a woman is no less than man in terms of anything.Thank you mam for your beautiful explanation.
Thank you ma'am for such a wonderful explanation. I have come across many explanation but nothing alike yours . I hope this video gets more recognition.
Explanation was really good only thing I would like to add is schizophrenia is nowhere related to split personality ( dissociative identity disorders) they both are different, apart from this I found ur explanation really helpful, U R an amazing teacher
This lecture of yours helped me a lot while I was searching through the web for an detailed explanation of this poem. I came through your channel previous year and then immediately I subscribed it. The credit of all my preparation of 1st semester examination goes to you. My sincere thanks to you ma'am ❤ . Would recommend you to make a video on the detailed explanation of the novels like Rajmohan's Wife and Bravely Fought The Queen. A single video will do a lot to us.
The explanation really helped a lot ..one request ma'am, if possible please try to make such videos on each text of the syllabus. It would be very helpful for us...we are eagerly awaiting...❤️
I'm out of words.. this poem is just so real, so true. Idk how to say it, i felt every line, every word of this poem. I'm not exaggerating, but it was too overwhelming that i had to pause video from time to time to give it a think. It's not just autobiographical for Kamala Das, but all the women around the world. Not only from that time but also about now, present. It has still not changed. The patriarchy, the suffering, the dominance over women, shutting them up, and when they actually learn to raise their voice, call them ill, or shameless, and so many names. Our society still hadn't changed. The agents of patriarchy are still here. Thank you for explaining it so better, when i read this poem myself i knew this poem has so much behind it. Its a masterpiece!
If you have liked this, I am sure you would love "The Yellow Wallpaper" too. Do watch that even if it is not in your syllabus. It is there in my channel
Thank you very much maam...I am spell bound that your explanation is so so so clear and easily understandable...I am a student of English Literature Honours and I am going to follow your channel for my own help...Hope you continuously keep this initiative...May Almighty bless you...
That is so sweet of you. But trust me, each comment matters to me, all of you are different individuals and your appreciation matters above everything else
I can't help leaving my comment because your lecture has brought tears in my eyes. May be it sounds hyperbolic but it's true. I know ma'am being a woman you realise each and every word of Kamala Das which is expressed throughout your lecture. Being a woman I too can realise it . I can realise this poem,the situation of women which is still kind of unchanged and universal and our struggle........ I don't know how to express my feeling,what to write. I have been just pausing the video again and again and overwhelming. Really you're a real example of "Madam" ,how honest your lectures are ! Hats off Madam , I feel very lucky to come across you through internet. You're one of my inspiration .😌🙏
Love you sweetheart ❤️
This is called real teaching, the very meaning of the poem is Cristal clear.
Its ' crystal clear'
@@missanonymous7276 No. It's crystal clear.
@@abeljustine7008 No, It's crystal clear.
@@UPSC_with_someone 😀
Thank you ma'am
God you have an immense talent of teaching and explaining things which is not something many people can do.
The video lesson was really helpful. Thank you so much and Keep up the good work.
I have seen so many of your lectures. What amazes me the most is the fact that you never impose your personal thoughts or biases on any of the characters. You Never pass judgments even though you teach with so much passion! Respect.
The beauty of this poem is that it is very relatable. We may not have those congenial experiences but somehow our suffering unites us all. I particularly find it very appealing that Kamala Das does not only embolden the concept of feminism but also the ideas of individuality and freedom regardless your gender. And lastly, an amazing explanation by you ma'am. Thank you so much for making a video on this masterpiece.
A responsible and a genuine explanation in an excellent interpretation . Heart felt wishes!
So nice of you
Soon I'll be graduating. One biggg thanks to you ma'am. You helped me a lot. Most probably the best English teaching channel I found on this platform.
34:18 Correction. I am a psychology student, what you described here is actually DID (Dissociative Identity Disorder) and not schizophrenia. Schizophrenia is complicated but for the sake of explanation, I'll oversimplify it, it is where the person has hallucinations. They could be visual, auditory, sensations etc. Delusions are also a part of it. To learn more about DID, I recommend Anthony Padilla's video : I spent a day with MULTIPLE PERSONALITIES (Dissociative Identity Disorder). For schizophrenia, you could refer to CrashCourse.
I stand corrected. Sorry for my generalization. You are absolutely correct.
Watching this video on 15.02.2023
What an amazing class mam.. Making everyone listen to this poem with great understanding ❤
MAM REALLY UR TECHNIQUE OF TEACHING IS JUST BEYOND EXPRESSING IN ANY ADJECTIVES...THANKS A MILLION MAM..
I have my sessional examination tomorrow and gone through the text throughly but your explanation is like cherry on the cake ❤️. Thank you Ma'am . Please keep uploading such videos (if possible of every text 🥺) , we remain hungry of your explanation🤧
So sweet
This explanation really helps to me for understanding the whole poem. 💖It likes that Kamala Das the writer herself is describing the poem as her to me. I am very thankful to you mam for giving us such an incredible explanation of this poem. 🙏
You are a real role model for all teachers for conveying any complex ideas in a simplified manner.
Superb ma'am.
Fell love with your class.
Expecting more lectures from you🙏🙏🙏🙏
Happy evening ma'am
You are a living goddess of literature to me❤❤. I have listened to this lecture just now. I enjoyed this lecture thoroughly. I felt like I was listening to Kamala Das when I listened to this poem. I am at a loss for words to thank you. I cannot express my gratitude by using the word "thank you ". I really enjoyed this lesson. Your lectures are filled with great essence and interpretations. I love the way that you interpret all the poems.. Kudos to you ma'am. Your sessions are a feast to me. I love to watch all your sessions. I started enjoying literature by watching your videos ma'am. I can't help writing my comments for you..Lots of love for you from Tamilnadu ma'am. Thank you soooooooooooooooo much ma'am ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
@@priyankasenthil8112 your words touched the core of my heart. Bless you dear❣️❣️
Amazing Amazing explanation mam 💓💓now I understand this poem very beautifully🤗
It's a masterpiece ❤.. Never had such amazing learning experience before.. Thank you for giving us this enlightning experience. I feel blessed to have found you on UA-cam.❤
What a great teacher I got,mam please keeps this series regular🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
Good Afternoon Ma'am. At the very beginning I express my heart-felt gratitude for your efforts. At the same time I have a few questions. It will be very kind of you, if you may clear my doubts.
1. At the very beginning when the poet says she knows no politics, yet knows the name of those in power, may this be interpreted as a kind of verbal irony in the sense she says she has no knowledge, yet she has knowledge? She is proving their presupposition of woman's ignorance wrong?
2. While speaking about are lingual identity, she says she speaks in three languages. I read that she has spent a considerable period of her childhood in Calcutta. So, is it possible that she knew Bengali as the third language, in place of Hindi?
3. While explaining you said dream has a language of its own. What is that language? She says she dreams In one. What kind of language is it? Kindly elaborate.
4.Again you said that her English was a challenge to the Colonial masters as well as the society. Most probably because the colonial masters will understand only if written in English. But isn't it strange, that to challenge the authority , one has to learn the language of the authority, only then she can challenge? They never try to learn our language for a change. Though the English she uses is an Indianized one. But still English. Also, in the Indian society of her time, a handful of the population actually new the language. In their case, they even do not know they are being challenged.
5. She was contrasting her language from the sounds of trees, monsoon clouds, rain funeral pyre. Apart from these sounds being unaware or enlightened like human speech, can these be interpreted as different states of Indian women? For example,
tress in face of storm may symbolize women who are taught to face all difficulties single handedly and silently ? They are like trees, who silently suffer all storms of life and never complain?
Or the pregnant Monsoon cloud which are like women who have thousand emotions pent up in their hearts, but are prohibited to express?
The rain may symbolize their silent tears, or even if loud enough for others to hear, they do not actually listen or try to understand the reason of her tears? As for the funeral pyre, it might symbolize the practice of Sati or it might also be representative of women who silently die everyday before they express themselves, where the fire in her heart is silenced?
6. She asked for love. May we also interpret this as an adolescent's demand for care and attention as common in her age, but she is given away in marriage instead out of their own misinterpretations?
7.She was protesting against the categorizers. But isn't she herself categorizing again while saying, he is everyman who wants a woman, Or in the sense of universalizing herself with every woman and vice versa? She is categorizing men in their pre-supposed nature like river and so the women in their pre- supposed nature as ocean.
8. In the lines:
"I ask each and everyone,/ the answer is, it is I. Anywhere and/ Everywhere, I see the one who calls himself I;"
Here she uses the term "himself" .So, is she referring to men or male "I" in these lines? And in a way she trying to say the in patriarchy only men have identity. They had the right to call themselves I. And she is establishing Her identity as well as that of all women Through the Female I in the last lines. As if saying , Like a man I too feel. A woman feels too. She to is an human being just like the man is; No difference, in no way is she inferior when she says " I too call myself I"?
9. In case of using schizophrenia, was she really suffering from that disorder or was she using it to refer to her identity crisis, her search for "I" in patriarchal society which the latter stamped as her disorder? In the sense that she was asking something which is not acceptable and unthinkable in society, her individual identity?
10. In the course of your explanation, you were talking about sin as something defined by religion, not by law. Its not logically proved and no crime. The 7 deadly sins according to Christianity or the 6-' Ripus', then what are these rules against moral excesses created for? Some baseless impositions? Can a question of morality be relative?. But if everyone defies that, irrespective of genders, what will happen? Will there be a chaos or anarchic condition, a fall of moral order though that order is made my people themselves? for themselves?
11. Ma'am, I am curious to know what is the origin of this institution of patriarchy. We say so much about without knowing the roots. Like every other things it must also have a beginning? How did all these start?
12. Kamala Das 's initial response to patriarchy was defying her womanliness. What is this 'femininity' or 'womanliness'.? What is feminism? Is it blindly aping or imitating the men in power or the patriarchal power? Or is it creating my own individuality and recognizing we all are human irrespective of our gender, recognizing humanity above all? For example, smoking is injurious to health. But some start smoking as a symbol of defying patriarchy based on a stereotyped or traditional concept that Men smoke. So we are no less. Even in movies we see. It might also be normal addiction for most with no such thought as well. A matter of pure choice. But if a protest, Isn't it strange way of protesting? If he jumps in well, I too shall jump to show my equal status. Or indirectly aren't we somewhere admiring and accepting and trying to follow the ways we mark as domain of man in the apparent guise of protest? What is the essence of feminism? And I am also curious about the word 'woman'. Does it refer to one who woos a man?
And finally, I want to put forward a request for classes on The Merchant Of Venice, Dr. Faustus, and Canterbury Tales if possible. These will help me in my semester, Thank you Ma'am.
Your question deserves time. I will definitely try to address the questions. Just give me some time.
Needless to say, i am thoroughly impressed by your questions and look forward to answering them.
@@NibblePopSure Ma'am. Thank you. I will patiently wait for your reply 😊
I will try to address your questions serially.
1. Women had no knowledge of politics; they only knew the headlines. Hence only the names of the prime ministers were familiar to them. At the same time, it was reality that women were poorly represented in politics despite figures like Indira Gandhi looming large.
2. She is not very specific. The third language might have been Hindi, Kannada or even Bengali.
3. Dream, like cinema, has its own language. When we dream it is not any one language but a super-lingual sensory experience. Dreams are made of the sum-total of our life experiences, embedded in our deep sub-conscious. So, this language of dream is a unique one.
4. To win a battle you need to use the weapons matching the ones that your opponents use. So is the case with language here. It was important for her to be understood first. So, she uses the language only to use it as her weapon.
5. Kamala Das's imagery is always pregnant with the potential of multiple interpretation. I really like the way you see it. As you have observed that, the imagery she mentions are, despite being sounds, somewhat like silence. Here, she tries to establish that unlike these, her voice is eloquent. If you are equating these images with silent women, then Kamala Das is asserting her difference from these women.
6. To some extent yes. But even if she asked for sexual love, natural in the age of curiosity, she gets confinement and no companionship. She is hitting at the way in which love and sex is associated with duty and matrimony in Indian culture. Woman's desire is seen as something obnoxious and taboo.
7. No. The moment she universalizes herself, she is breaking the stereotypes. She is both sinned against and sinner, both saint and fallen. So, she puts herself outside narrow boundaries of defined categories.
8.She deliberately chooses "himself", because she was talking first about “every man”. Then she makes the lines fuse into a universal idea of humanity. She begins by talking about male symbols (sword in a sheath) but fuses into female ones (dies with rattle, meaning female infanticide). She feels that the pronoun I is a unifying thing. It is asserting her identity and equality.
9. She was diagnosed. You may read her autobiography "My Story". She was even hospitalized for this problem. She used to be on bromides and other drugs to treat her condition.
10. Rules and laws and moralities are created to stabilize a structure, a system, an institution. They conform to the establishment. Rules can be beneficial for sustenance. And resistance and revolution always create chaos. See for instance divorce, and live-in relationship, and acceptance of the LGBT community can be seen both as a problem (e.g. property rights and inheritance, surname, professional status, gender-based facilities) and an opportunity. Chaos is necessary for cosmos. Yes, morality is relative. Often people use morality as an excuse for subjugation. Look at the way in which traditional religion has defined a morally good woman as opposed to a morally good man and you will see the double standards.
11. It all started right when society did. Back in the Mesopotamian Age I suppose. Read Gerda Lerner's book on the Origin of Patriarchy. I will make a video some day on this.
12. This question can not be answered in UA-cam comment section. It demands a full-fledged class which I will take I guess since many students are showing interest in feminism.
It was wonderful answering you. Hope to have more such questions in future. God Bless.
@@NibblePop Thank you ma'am for your blessing and for clearing my doubts. I will surely search and try to read the book. I look forward to more such videos. ☺
Ma'am what a mesmerizing explaination. I feel the poem being a girl. Thankyou so much😍😇🙏🙏🙏
So nice of you
This is first class with you ma'am... I will talk to you i don't meet any such a grateful class before..... I think if i am following your every class than not need any tuition ♥️💓💓 thank you ma'am.. Thanks a lot♥️♥️
The perfect definition of explanation....
Woah FASCINATING
I heard so many explanations but have to say, this was the best one👍
I wish you were my tutor. It's really interesting to listen to your lesson, very helpful!
Thank you mam for your beautiful explanation of the poem on An Introduction.Mam whenever I lisiten to this poem I feel that this poem is not a mere poem by Kamala Das but it is a poem about a patriarchal society and how they treat women as an object.Mam when ever I read this poem I felt that a woman is no less than man in terms of anything.Thank you mam for your beautiful explanation.
Mam your way of teaching is just out of the world . You are such a nice person . Thanks mam for helping us and more from you is solicited
You are the best literature teacher
Honestly, it helps me a lot
Thank you Mam
Love from Nagaland: India
Thank you ma'am for such a wonderful explanation. I have come across many explanation but nothing alike yours . I hope this video gets more recognition.
Explanation was really good only thing I would like to add is schizophrenia is nowhere related to split personality ( dissociative identity disorders) they both are different, apart from this I found ur explanation really helpful, U R an amazing teacher
Nice explanation madam. Thank you very much. 👌👌👌🙏🏻🙏🏻
This is the right way to discuss literary pieces...excellent...thanks m'am
This lecture of yours helped me a lot while I was searching through the web for an detailed explanation of this poem. I came through your channel previous year and then immediately I subscribed it. The credit of all my preparation of 1st semester examination goes to you. My sincere thanks to you ma'am ❤ . Would recommend you to make a video on the detailed explanation of the novels like Rajmohan's Wife and Bravely Fought The Queen. A single video will do a lot to us.
Wow, it's a superb explanation. Thank you so much for this.
Content, presentation, expressions and command ..... just excellent mam .. thank you so much
The explanation really helped a lot ..one request ma'am, if possible please try to make such videos on each text of the syllabus. It would be very helpful for us...we are eagerly awaiting...❤️
🤩wow... amazing explanation🎉...
Outstanding lecture ! thank you so much ma'am 🙏🙏🙏
What a great explanation ma'am ❤
Wow, wow!! What an amazing explaination. Insightful reading and comprehension... Thank you ❤️
Vivid description. Extremely well explained here
Thank you Ma'am...your explanation is excellent 👌
Really grateful to you. Love the way you present & review . ❤️ from SL
I'm out of words.. this poem is just so real, so true. Idk how to say it, i felt every line, every word of this poem. I'm not exaggerating, but it was too overwhelming that i had to pause video from time to time to give it a think. It's not just autobiographical for Kamala Das, but all the women around the world. Not only from that time but also about now, present. It has still not changed. The patriarchy, the suffering, the dominance over women, shutting them up, and when they actually learn to raise their voice, call them ill, or shameless, and so many names. Our society still hadn't changed. The agents of patriarchy are still here. Thank you for explaining it so better, when i read this poem myself i knew this poem has so much behind it. Its a masterpiece!
If you have liked this, I am sure you would love "The Yellow Wallpaper" too. Do watch that even if it is not in your syllabus. It is there in my channel
@@NibblePop I surely will, mam!
Wow! It's a beautiful explanation. Please do continue to help us to improve knowledge in English literature in such way. Thank you ma'am.
totally lost in your explanation... u nailed it ma'am. thank you so much🙏💫
Thank you soo much for the detailed explanation...
Excellent class. Really helpful. Thanks a lot.
Woow.. It was really interesting to listen you. Thank you very much for this great explanation ma'am
Excellent explanation 😊
Your explanation is incredible 🎉🎉❤❤❤lots of love mam❤❤❤
Well described 🙏🙏 ,This poem is near to my heart
It was an amazing lecture I have ever heard. Thanks mam. 🙏
Madam your fluency in English is praise worthy I like it
By.. MS. Mandla
I felt like kamala das herself is teaching this poem to me as her each and every words are explained by ma'am amazingly
Perhaps there is a little bit of Kamala das in every indian woman
Thank you very much maam...I am spell bound that your explanation is so so so clear and easily understandable...I am a student of English Literature Honours and I am going to follow your channel for my own help...Hope you continuously keep this initiative...May Almighty bless you...
God bless you too
Thank you so much. It's like this channel is for me Ma'am.
Thank you so much ma'am, lots of respect 🙏
Your lectures are too good ❤
The best explanation of the core of the work...
Thank you mam
Thank you so much mam. This is very helpful for me. Thank you ☺️
Thank you for explaining this so succinctly.
Your lectures feel therapeutic. Sometimes I put them on at night and it helps me fall asleep.
😀😀😀😀 if you say I make you fall asleep it might mean something else too, hope I don't bore you to sleep 😀😀😀
@@NibblePop Absolutely not, that is why I used the word 'therapeutic'. Your videos are very relaxing
Wonderful explanation🙏🙏🙏🙏
Madam thank you for this clear explanation !! Its really useful ❤️ you made this poem easy to understand.
Your explanation is awesome ma'am. 🥺❤
Excellent analysis❤
Perfectly explained and understood
Just pleased by your explanation of the poem, thanks ma'am 🙏🏻
Beautifully beautiful♥️
Absolutely awesome❤
Honestly, it helped a lot Thank you ma'am ❤ ...
Thank you ma'am you make me understand the poem easily.❤️❤️
Proficient explanation ❤❤
Excellent explanation madam🙏🙏
Well explained ... mam....understood well
Your definition highly made me sufficient in knowledge at the time of elaborating An Introduction...
Madam your way of speaking is extremely excellent I have made it part and parcel of my life
By.. MS. Mandla
Great work Ma'am.. 😊
Thank you...
Thanks a lot mam .....with the help of this video...I took my seminar and got good remarks
Excellent leacture💎 great work maam
Madam thank you for your class.
Great explanation 👌
Excellent explanation ma'am 🙏🙏🙏
Thank you so much mam for such a precize and meaningful explaination
This is a totally different explanation than I got in college
Thank you so much Mam 😊 Your Lecture Is The Best One 😊💟
Great madam
Very good described u
The comment section is filled with my doppelgangers😂😂😂
I too heard many explanations but trust me this is a masterpiece....thank u mam🙏🏻🙏🏻
That is so sweet of you. But trust me, each comment matters to me, all of you are different individuals and your appreciation matters above everything else
@@NibblePop aww that's so sweet of u🥰🥰🥰....mam can you do a similar discussion on the poem "I am not that woman" by Kishwar Naheed ...
Thank you soo much😊
Crystal clear maam😊
Thanks mam. Pls send more videos .... . Those are in our syllabus 2 ed sem...
Great mam
Thank you so much.❤️A clear explanation
Best explanation 🥰
Ma'am the explanation of the text was so good..... it's really helpful for me.......
thank u very much teacher..
great explanation
Thank you soo much maam 🙏
Thank you so much!
Thank you so much ma'am...ur classes are really really helpful....
This video was really helpful and beautiful explanation