Abstract This paper critically examines Kavita Kane’s Ahalya’s Awakening through the lens ofpostmodern literary discourse, exploring how the author reinterprets and reconstructs mythologyto question gendered hierarchies and patriarchal narratives. By shifting focus from the dominantmale perspective to Ahalya’s silenced voice, Kane deconstructs the mythic framework toforeground female agency, autonomy, and desire. The study investigates how the novel employspostmodernist techniques such as fragmentation, intertextuality, and revisionist challengetraditional representations of sin, purity, and redemption. Through this reinterpretation, Ahalyaemerges not as a passive victim of divine retribution but as a self-aware individual reclaimingher identity and moral consciousness. The paper presentsAhalya’s Awakening within the broadercontext of contemporary feminist mythmaking, highlighting how postmodern Indian fictionreclaims myth as a groundfor resistance and reinterpretation, bridging the mythical and themodern in the quest for gender justice and self-realization.Furthermore, it situates Kane’sAhalya’s Awakening within the growing corpus of mythological retellings that redefine theHigh Technology Letters cultural imagination of Indian womanhood. By blending myth with psychological realism, Kaneinterrogates the moral binaries of virtue and transgression that have historically confined womenwithin mythic traditions. Theintrospective tone and layered characterization used in the workreveal Ahalya’s journey from silence to self-expression as emblematic of the modern woman’sstruggle for self-definition amidst enduring patriarchal structures. In this sense, the novel notonly reclaims an overlooked female figure but also transforms mythology into a postmoderndialogue about identity, freedom, and the politics of interpretation.
Dr. S. Bhuvaneswari P. Aathira (Mon,) studied this question.
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