High Chair
Sita Kulatunga's fine story ' The
High Chair ', which won first prize in the Short Story competition conducted in
1977 by the English Association of Sri Lanka, and was awarded SAARC Women's
prize in 1999, has been translated into German by O.Froehling and into Japanese
by Tadashi Noguchi.
It focuses on a Sinhalese village
girl who has been able, despite her origins, to enter university. Prema is the
daughter of a dhobi woman. A highly intelligent young woman, she is
humiliatingly aware that she belongs to a cast that is considered inferior to
most others according to the rules laid down by the hierarchical social system,
which still flourishes, in 'democratic' Sri Lanka.
At home on her first university
vacation, she has offered to deputize for her sick mother, wash a bundle of
soiled clothes and household linen at the stream, and, the task completed,
delivered a bundle of freshly washed and ironed laundry to the home of the
Chairman of the Village Council. “Says Prof.Yasmine Goonaratne. ...Dreading an
encounter with the Chairman's son Thilak Jayasuriya, her classmate at
Peradeniya (though not in the village, where he had attended a superior
school), Prema enters his home through the back door.
Luncihami, a servant of the
household ' who knew who is who, provides Prema with a small schoolroom chair
to sit on when she calls with her bundle of laundry: for a dhobi's daughter, a
high backed chair of the dining room at the Chairman's residence -chairs on
which she and her kind are not permitted to sit -are out of bounds,
representing a way of life that her birth has placed beyond her reach.
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