The present research paper seeks an inclusive, comparative, thorough analysis of how Indian society is described throughout the short stories written by two of Indian English Literature's most significant contributors—R.K. Narayan (1906–2001) and Khushwant Singh (1915–2014). While both authors developed from parallel expatriates of colonial and postcolonial contexts, their inventive revelations, narrative strategies, and ethical positionings produced noticeably distinct illustrations of Indian societal genuineness. Narayan, with his carefully constructed fictional town of Malgudi, presents a complex, frequently humorous, and profoundly humanist examination of ethical and spiritual challenges within a traditional, gradually changing Hindu society. His universe is marked by psychological depth, cultural continuity, and subtle irony. In contrast, Khushwant Singh adopts a more straightforward, satirical, and politically engaged perspective, addressing the immediate societal turmoil of Partition, urban corruption, religious hypocrisy, and the mental scars left by colonialism. This research exclusively asserts that as Narayan illustrates a microcosmic, psychologically nuanced India wrestling with dharma and modernity from an internal viewpoint, Singh portrays the macrocosmic, external fractures of a nation in distress, using journalistic realism and sharp satire to reveal social deterioration. The article explores significant thematic domains such as community versus individualism, the influence of religion and ritual, reactions to historical crises, narrative styles and language, as well as the depiction of gender and domestic life. By closely analyzing select stories and interacting with established research, this analysis illustrates that Narayan and Singh collaboratively offer a nuanced yet differing portrayal of India's societal structure in the mid-to-late twentieth century, with each author uncovering vital insights that the other overlooks.
Sharma et al. (Sat,) studied this question.