Originally posted by: asmitamohanty
That's interesting Rekha Dii.
You know Dii.. I believe catalyst is something that causes the reaction to happen in faster rate...but remains unchanged after it... I hope same is with Arshi... in ITV when they go into whitewashing a PL to make her relevant they do it in such a way as if the previous black person never existed.....
....
Interesting...even I would like to discuss about Arshi thing with you...
And yes.. I am also waiting for Othello and omkaara post...but take your time...I am ready to wait for a good thing...
Eagerly waiting....
Yes Asmita you are right…a catalyst is not expected to undergo change while being the cause for action. A change agent
In literature however this chemical definition is not literally applied but seen in similar terms.
It is seen as an event or a person that demands an immediate response of the hero. I use the term hero but basically the main protagonist. Arshi has been on the scene long so why the reference to her as a catalyst now…
Arshi is the catalyst always if you see in the story because she is the pivot of the moral dilemma for Ani. Yet a catalyst depending on situation can afford the protagonist time for action. In the past Ani was always buying time in respect of the Arshi question.
But what has happened to her at this stage causes the greatest urgency in Ani. He is immediately forced into a decision. When she is in burns unit or she loses the will to live or her use of limbs ( I know all poorly executed in the narrative), Ani is forced to take a call. We don’t know his state of mind but can infer many things…he may be guilty ( why is that so impossible to consider?) He had professed love to Jhanak in a deep moment of passion, goes on to show his anger to Jhanak by faking his love for Arshi and from his angle when the fire incident happens maybe guilt was his foremost thought, this is one of the inferences. For a person, who helped a stranger and stayed on to support her in her difficult times, it’s not hard to imagine that such a man could suffer pangs of guilt for not being fair to Arshi, his feeling for Jhanak aside.
Coming back to the tag of catalyst and placement of Arshi in that corner… I am certain she is that… catalysts often knock on your door to demand your attention… sometimes the knock isn’t persistent and it is possible to ignore or buy time while answering the question which Ani did all this while but this time around the knock is persistent and Ani cannot ignore it so he has chosen to answer the door.
A catalyst will always present you with dilemmas and if the catalyst doesn’t present a good dilemma, he or she is not a good catalyst 😀
In answering that dilemma, the hero will make a decision that will carry a price . This dilemma is in effect a test of the hero’s decision making… what does he prioritise and how In making the decision, he will have to let go of something which is described as the price to pay. How he moves from one Act to another is determined by his choices. If he had chosen to come clean with Arshi on falling in love with Jhanak, he may not have Jhanak in his life but the story may have ended there 😂😂😂
Also it’s not the writer’s responsibility to solve the hero’s problem but his craft to present situations that will test the hero to move the story from point A to Point B
1.6k