What can a woman paralyzed by marital despair in Cry, the Peacock teach a corporate leader about organizational burnout? What can a Bombay clerk pasting newspaper cuttings in Voices in the City reveal about the psychological costs of meaningless labour? This article argues that the fiction of Anita Desai constitutes an unacknowledged archive of human psychology under modern professional and economic pressures. Through close analysis of Desai's protagonists, Maya, Nirode, Bim, and the capitalist figures who surround them, I demonstrate that her novels systematically explore the psychological consequences of contemporary life: the alienation of repetitive work, the anxiety of financial uncertainty, the identity crisis produced by rapid social change, and the distorted interpersonal relationships that arise within modern households. For a conference examining recent developments in professional fields, Desai's work offers three urgent interventions: (1) a critique of the psychological damage inflicted by indifferent systems and exploitative practices; (2) a feminist analysis of unpaid labour and dependency; and (3) a humanistic model of "psychological capital" that professional training has yet to adequately theorize. The article concludes by proposing those literary studies—far from being ornamental—provides diagnostic tools essential for humane and sustainable professional practice across all sectors.
Suresh et al. (Mon,) studied this question.