What haunting presence followed Pappachi through every house he lived in?
Pappachi's Moth
Whose forbidden love does Ammu pursue due to her fierce independence and defiance of social norms?
Velutha
How does Blanche's relationship to moths in A Streetcar Named Desire differ from Pappachi's in God of Small Things?
Blanche fears visibility while Pappachi craves recognition—contrasting fear with desire for recognition
What does Pappachi's Moth symbolize?
Pappachi's unfulfilled desires and the damage done by unmet ambition
How does Pappachi's emasculation under colonial rule manifest in his behavior toward his family?
Domestic violence, black moods, and sudden bouts of temper
What was Pappachi's greatest setback and what themes are presented?
Not having a moth named after him (representing colonial erasure and thwarted ambition)
To what destructive force is Ammu's rage compared?
A suicide bomber (self-destructive but explosive)
What external force causes Pappachi's invisibility, and by what method does Blanche make herself invisible?
Colonialism causes Pappachi's invisibility; Blanche uses dim lights and paper lanterns
What concept does the moth haunting Pappachi across generations represent?
Intergenerational trauma—the way trauma passes down through families
Ammu's feminine identity is complicated by her defiance of traditional gender roles. What does her relationship with Velutha represent?
An act of resistance and rebellion
According to the text, Pappachi's Moth was held responsible for his black moods and sudden bouts of temper. Name at least two effects this had on his family.
It tormented his children and his children's children, causing intergenerational trauma.
What two systems trap Ammu and prevent her from freely loving Velutha?
Caste and gender (or family expectations)
Both Pappachi and Blanche are destroyed, but the source of destruction differs. Explain the key difference.
Pappachi's destruction radiates outward, affecting his family, while Blanche's is direct, resulting in her psychological breakdown
What caused Pappachi's sense of self to be damaged, leading to his conditional love for his family?
Colonial Emasculation
Compare Pappachi's response to powerlessness with Ammu's.
Pappachi directs masculine aggression outward; Ammu directs feminine aggression inward
What are the specific physical characteristics of the "pernicious ghost" of the moth?
Gray, furry, with unusually dense dorsal tufts
What duality does Ammu's relationship with her children and her lover demonstrate?
She is both a protective mother and someone willing to destroy her own life
What different aspects do Roy's God of Small Things and Williams' A Streetcar Named Desire explore regarding human destruction?
Roy focuses on external systems (colonialism and caste), while Williams also explores internal psychological collapse.
What does the moth represent as both a scientific specimen and a psychological symbol?
The collision of the scientific with the emotional
The moth symbolises Pappachi's thwarted masculinity and need for recognition. Explain how his lack of power results in the abuse of power within his family.
He seeks to regain control and dominance through violence against those weaker than himself.
Explain how Pappachi's obsession with the unnamed moth reveals the damage of colonialism and conditional love.
The moth symbolizes his invisibility and emasculation under colonial rule; his love for his family became conditional on his recognition and power
Analyse how Ammu's character embodies resistance to patriarchal and caste-based oppression, yet ultimately becomes a victim of both systems.
Her rage is a form of rebellion that cannot escape the structural violence of her society
Compare how Roy and Williams use the moth to explore gender, power, and the human condition.
Roy shows masculine emasculation leading to domestic violence; Williams shows feminine fragility drawn to dangerous attraction
Analyse how the moth functions as both a literal creature and a metaphor for the "small things" in the novel.
It represents how small, seemingly insignificant events and desires shape entire lives and perpetuate cycles of violence
Both Pappachi and Ammu are trapped by systems of oppression. Discuss how their different genders lead to different forms of destruction and resistance.
Pappachi's destruction is externalised and violent; Ammu's is internalised and self-destructive, yet both are acts of rebellion against systems that deny them agency