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Madhorubagan book review
Madhorubagan book review







Until he learns the ‘shameful’ secret, of course. Jassi, imagining the baby girl to be his own, seems extremely proud to have begun a family.

madhorubagan book review madhorubagan book review

This is not because she is desperate for a baby or afraid that he won’t understand the pressure on her to be a mother, but because she does not want him to feel emasculated by his ‘inability’ to make her pregnant. Immediately, she opts to undergo artificial insemination, but without letting him know. After four years of trying to have a child with no success, Payal learns that Jassi could be the one ‘with the problem’. Only, the baby isn’t biologically Jassi’s. In the sequel, which takes place four years later, Payal becomes a mother. But there is also Tanu’s friend Payal who marries Manu’s friend, Jassi, in the first film, Tanu Weds Manu (2011). I know I state that bluntly, so let’s review them one by one.Īanand Rai’s Tanu Weds Manu Returns is about Tanu, Manu and their dysfunctional marriage.

madhorubagan book review

What does Tanu Weds Manu Returns (2015) have in common with Perumal Murugan’s controversial book, One Part Woman (2013)? Stories on emasculation by infertility. By Shweta Krishnan Categories Reel Review Review Technology and Sexuality July 1, 2015









Madhorubagan book review