Arun Joshi’ The Strange Case of Billy Biswas (1971) is a profound philosophical and cultural narrative that juxtaposes the alienation of Western existentialism with the redemptive potential of Indian spiritual traditions. The protagonist, Billy Biswas, is a Western-educated Indian civil servant who experiences a deep inner crisis marked by a sense of rootlessness, identity fragmentation, and existential angst. His disillusionment with the materialism, inauthenticity, and superficiality of urban bourgeois life mirrors the central concerns of Western existential thought as articulated by thinkers like Sartre and Camus. However, rather than ending in despair or nihilism, Billy’s journey takes a radical turn as he retreats into the tribal regions of India. There, through immersion in a simpler, nature-bound, and spiritually resonant existence, he undergoes a process of psychological and spiritual transformation. This shift reflects key tenets of Indian philosophy, particularly the ideals of renunciation, self-realization, and harmony with the cosmos. The tribal life, though at times idealized, serves as a metaphor for a deeper spiritual return—an act of shedding the fragmented modern self to achieve unity and purpose.
Subrat Dwivedi (Wed,) studied this question.