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Chapter 8 
Novels, Society and History 
 
? The Rise of the Novel 
? Novels emerged as a new literary genre in many parts of the world. 
? The novel first took firm root in England and France. New groups of lower middle 
class people such as shopkeepers and clerks, along with the traditional aristocratic 
and gentlemanly classes in England and France, formed the readership for novels. 
? Earnings of authors increased, which freed them from financial dependence on the 
patronage of aristocrats and gave them independence to experiment with different 
literary styles. 
? The novel allowed flexibility in the form of writing.  
? The Publishing Market 
? People had easier access to books. 
? Technological improvements in printing brought down the prices of books and 
innovations in marketing led to expanded sales. 
? Novels were both personally and publicly read as they described worlds that were 
both absorbing and believable. 
? Community and Society 
? The Novel created a feeling of connection with the fate of the rural communities. 
? It used vernacular languages that are spoken by common people and created a sense 
of shared world between diverse people in a nation. 
? The New Women 
? Women got more leisure to read as well as write novels. They drew upon their 
experiences, wrote about family life and earned public recognition.  
? Many novels, like that of Jane Austen (Pride and Prejudice), gave a glimpse of the 
world of women in rural society in early nineteenth century Britain. 
? Women novelists not only popularized the domestic role of women but also 
showcased the women rebel. Writers such as Charlotte Bronte (Jane Eyre) dealt with 
the new rebel women. 
? Novels for the Young 
? Novels for young boys idealized a new man: someone who was powerful, assertive, 
independent and daring.  
? These novels aroused the excitement and adventure of conquering strange lands.  
? Love stories written for adolescent girls also first became popular in this period.  
Page 2


 
 
Chapter 8 
Novels, Society and History 
 
? The Rise of the Novel 
? Novels emerged as a new literary genre in many parts of the world. 
? The novel first took firm root in England and France. New groups of lower middle 
class people such as shopkeepers and clerks, along with the traditional aristocratic 
and gentlemanly classes in England and France, formed the readership for novels. 
? Earnings of authors increased, which freed them from financial dependence on the 
patronage of aristocrats and gave them independence to experiment with different 
literary styles. 
? The novel allowed flexibility in the form of writing.  
? The Publishing Market 
? People had easier access to books. 
? Technological improvements in printing brought down the prices of books and 
innovations in marketing led to expanded sales. 
? Novels were both personally and publicly read as they described worlds that were 
both absorbing and believable. 
? Community and Society 
? The Novel created a feeling of connection with the fate of the rural communities. 
? It used vernacular languages that are spoken by common people and created a sense 
of shared world between diverse people in a nation. 
? The New Women 
? Women got more leisure to read as well as write novels. They drew upon their 
experiences, wrote about family life and earned public recognition.  
? Many novels, like that of Jane Austen (Pride and Prejudice), gave a glimpse of the 
world of women in rural society in early nineteenth century Britain. 
? Women novelists not only popularized the domestic role of women but also 
showcased the women rebel. Writers such as Charlotte Bronte (Jane Eyre) dealt with 
the new rebel women. 
? Novels for the Young 
? Novels for young boys idealized a new man: someone who was powerful, assertive, 
independent and daring.  
? These novels aroused the excitement and adventure of conquering strange lands.  
? Love stories written for adolescent girls also first became popular in this period.  
 
 
? Ramona (1884) by Helen Hunt Jackson, and Sarah Chauncey Woolsey’s What Katy 
Did (1872) along with R.L. Stevenson’s Treasure Island and Rudyard Kipling’s Jungle 
Book (1894) became great hits. 
? Colonialism and After 
? The early novel contributed to colonialism by making the readers feel they were a 
part of a superior community of fellow colonialists.  
? The view of the colonised people as primitive and barbaric holds true in works such 
as Daniel Defoe’s Robinson Crusoe. 
? Later in the 20
th
 century, writers such as Joseph Conrad (1857-1924) wrote novels 
that criticized colonialism. 
? The Novel Comes to India 
? Some of the earliest Indian novels were written in Bengali and Marathi. 
? 1857: Baba Padmanji wrote Yamuna Prayatnam 
? 1861: Lakshman Moreshwar Halbe’s Muktamala was published 
? Indian novelists wrote for developing a modern literature of the country that could 
produce a sense of national belonging. 
? Translations helped spread the popularity and growth of the novel. 
? The Novel in South India 
? 1889: O.Chandu Menon’s novel named Indulekha was published. This was 
the first modern novel in Malayalam. 
? 1878: In Andhra Pradesh, Kandukuri Viresalingam wrote a Telegu novel 
called Rajasekhara Caritamu. 
? The Novel in Hindi 
? Bharatendu Harishchandra, the pioneer of modern Hindi literature, 
encouraged many poets and writers to recreate and translate novels from 
other languages. 
? 1882: Srinivas Das published his novel Pariksha-Guru (The Master Examiner). 
Pariksha-Guru reflects the inner and outer world of the newly emerging 
middle classes under the colonial rule. 
? The writings of Devaki Nandan Khatri created a novel-reading public in 
Hindi. His novel Chandrakanta was hugely popular. 
? Premchand’s writings brought about excellence in the Hindi novels. He 
began writing in Urdu and then shifted to Hindi. 
? 1916: Premchand’s novel Sewasadan lifted the Hindi novel from the realm of 
fantasy, moralizing and simple entertainment to a serious reflection on the 
Page 3


 
 
Chapter 8 
Novels, Society and History 
 
? The Rise of the Novel 
? Novels emerged as a new literary genre in many parts of the world. 
? The novel first took firm root in England and France. New groups of lower middle 
class people such as shopkeepers and clerks, along with the traditional aristocratic 
and gentlemanly classes in England and France, formed the readership for novels. 
? Earnings of authors increased, which freed them from financial dependence on the 
patronage of aristocrats and gave them independence to experiment with different 
literary styles. 
? The novel allowed flexibility in the form of writing.  
? The Publishing Market 
? People had easier access to books. 
? Technological improvements in printing brought down the prices of books and 
innovations in marketing led to expanded sales. 
? Novels were both personally and publicly read as they described worlds that were 
both absorbing and believable. 
? Community and Society 
? The Novel created a feeling of connection with the fate of the rural communities. 
? It used vernacular languages that are spoken by common people and created a sense 
of shared world between diverse people in a nation. 
? The New Women 
? Women got more leisure to read as well as write novels. They drew upon their 
experiences, wrote about family life and earned public recognition.  
? Many novels, like that of Jane Austen (Pride and Prejudice), gave a glimpse of the 
world of women in rural society in early nineteenth century Britain. 
? Women novelists not only popularized the domestic role of women but also 
showcased the women rebel. Writers such as Charlotte Bronte (Jane Eyre) dealt with 
the new rebel women. 
? Novels for the Young 
? Novels for young boys idealized a new man: someone who was powerful, assertive, 
independent and daring.  
? These novels aroused the excitement and adventure of conquering strange lands.  
? Love stories written for adolescent girls also first became popular in this period.  
 
 
? Ramona (1884) by Helen Hunt Jackson, and Sarah Chauncey Woolsey’s What Katy 
Did (1872) along with R.L. Stevenson’s Treasure Island and Rudyard Kipling’s Jungle 
Book (1894) became great hits. 
? Colonialism and After 
? The early novel contributed to colonialism by making the readers feel they were a 
part of a superior community of fellow colonialists.  
? The view of the colonised people as primitive and barbaric holds true in works such 
as Daniel Defoe’s Robinson Crusoe. 
? Later in the 20
th
 century, writers such as Joseph Conrad (1857-1924) wrote novels 
that criticized colonialism. 
? The Novel Comes to India 
? Some of the earliest Indian novels were written in Bengali and Marathi. 
? 1857: Baba Padmanji wrote Yamuna Prayatnam 
? 1861: Lakshman Moreshwar Halbe’s Muktamala was published 
? Indian novelists wrote for developing a modern literature of the country that could 
produce a sense of national belonging. 
? Translations helped spread the popularity and growth of the novel. 
? The Novel in South India 
? 1889: O.Chandu Menon’s novel named Indulekha was published. This was 
the first modern novel in Malayalam. 
? 1878: In Andhra Pradesh, Kandukuri Viresalingam wrote a Telegu novel 
called Rajasekhara Caritamu. 
? The Novel in Hindi 
? Bharatendu Harishchandra, the pioneer of modern Hindi literature, 
encouraged many poets and writers to recreate and translate novels from 
other languages. 
? 1882: Srinivas Das published his novel Pariksha-Guru (The Master Examiner). 
Pariksha-Guru reflects the inner and outer world of the newly emerging 
middle classes under the colonial rule. 
? The writings of Devaki Nandan Khatri created a novel-reading public in 
Hindi. His novel Chandrakanta was hugely popular. 
? Premchand’s writings brought about excellence in the Hindi novels. He 
began writing in Urdu and then shifted to Hindi. 
? 1916: Premchand’s novel Sewasadan lifted the Hindi novel from the realm of 
fantasy, moralizing and simple entertainment to a serious reflection on the 
 
 
lives of ordinary and social issues. Sewasadan deals with the poor conditions 
of women, dowry and the hegemony of the Indian upper classes. 
? Novels in Bengal 
? There were two kinds of Bengali novels that emerged in the 19
th
 century: 
one was based on historical issues and the other was based on social 
problems and romantic relationships between men and women. 
? The new bhadralok found himself at home in the more private worlds of 
reading novels. 
? Initially, the Bengali novel used a colloquial style associated with urban life; 
it also used meyeli, the language associated with women’s speech. This style 
was replaced by Bankim Chandra Chattopadhyay’s prose, which was 
sanskritised but also contained a more vernacular style in it. 
? By the 20
th
 century, the power of telling stories in simple language made 
Sarat Chandra Chattopadhyay (1876-1938) the most popular novelist in 
Bengal and probably in the rest of India. 
? Uses of the Novel 
? Colonial administration found ‘vernacular’ novels a valuable source of information 
on native life and customs. Such information was useful for them in governing 
Indian society, with its large variety of communities and castes. 
? Books were translated into English, often by British administrators or Christian 
missionaries. 
? Indians used the novel as a powerful medium to criticise what they considered 
defects in the society and to suggest remedies. 
? Novels presented a glorified account of the past, which in turn created a sense of 
national pride among the readers. 
? Novels created a sense of collective belonging on the basis of one’s language. 
? The novels made their readers familiar with the ways in which people in other parts 
of their land spoke their languages. 
? Indian Women and the Novel 
? Women not only read novels but also started to write. 
? Novels allowed for a new kind of conception of womanhood. Women in South 
India began writing novels and short stories. 
? Ideas of a liberal environment and reform for women were presented in many 
works such as Rokeya Hossein’s Sultana’s Dream and Padmara. 
Page 4


 
 
Chapter 8 
Novels, Society and History 
 
? The Rise of the Novel 
? Novels emerged as a new literary genre in many parts of the world. 
? The novel first took firm root in England and France. New groups of lower middle 
class people such as shopkeepers and clerks, along with the traditional aristocratic 
and gentlemanly classes in England and France, formed the readership for novels. 
? Earnings of authors increased, which freed them from financial dependence on the 
patronage of aristocrats and gave them independence to experiment with different 
literary styles. 
? The novel allowed flexibility in the form of writing.  
? The Publishing Market 
? People had easier access to books. 
? Technological improvements in printing brought down the prices of books and 
innovations in marketing led to expanded sales. 
? Novels were both personally and publicly read as they described worlds that were 
both absorbing and believable. 
? Community and Society 
? The Novel created a feeling of connection with the fate of the rural communities. 
? It used vernacular languages that are spoken by common people and created a sense 
of shared world between diverse people in a nation. 
? The New Women 
? Women got more leisure to read as well as write novels. They drew upon their 
experiences, wrote about family life and earned public recognition.  
? Many novels, like that of Jane Austen (Pride and Prejudice), gave a glimpse of the 
world of women in rural society in early nineteenth century Britain. 
? Women novelists not only popularized the domestic role of women but also 
showcased the women rebel. Writers such as Charlotte Bronte (Jane Eyre) dealt with 
the new rebel women. 
? Novels for the Young 
? Novels for young boys idealized a new man: someone who was powerful, assertive, 
independent and daring.  
? These novels aroused the excitement and adventure of conquering strange lands.  
? Love stories written for adolescent girls also first became popular in this period.  
 
 
? Ramona (1884) by Helen Hunt Jackson, and Sarah Chauncey Woolsey’s What Katy 
Did (1872) along with R.L. Stevenson’s Treasure Island and Rudyard Kipling’s Jungle 
Book (1894) became great hits. 
? Colonialism and After 
? The early novel contributed to colonialism by making the readers feel they were a 
part of a superior community of fellow colonialists.  
? The view of the colonised people as primitive and barbaric holds true in works such 
as Daniel Defoe’s Robinson Crusoe. 
? Later in the 20
th
 century, writers such as Joseph Conrad (1857-1924) wrote novels 
that criticized colonialism. 
? The Novel Comes to India 
? Some of the earliest Indian novels were written in Bengali and Marathi. 
? 1857: Baba Padmanji wrote Yamuna Prayatnam 
? 1861: Lakshman Moreshwar Halbe’s Muktamala was published 
? Indian novelists wrote for developing a modern literature of the country that could 
produce a sense of national belonging. 
? Translations helped spread the popularity and growth of the novel. 
? The Novel in South India 
? 1889: O.Chandu Menon’s novel named Indulekha was published. This was 
the first modern novel in Malayalam. 
? 1878: In Andhra Pradesh, Kandukuri Viresalingam wrote a Telegu novel 
called Rajasekhara Caritamu. 
? The Novel in Hindi 
? Bharatendu Harishchandra, the pioneer of modern Hindi literature, 
encouraged many poets and writers to recreate and translate novels from 
other languages. 
? 1882: Srinivas Das published his novel Pariksha-Guru (The Master Examiner). 
Pariksha-Guru reflects the inner and outer world of the newly emerging 
middle classes under the colonial rule. 
? The writings of Devaki Nandan Khatri created a novel-reading public in 
Hindi. His novel Chandrakanta was hugely popular. 
? Premchand’s writings brought about excellence in the Hindi novels. He 
began writing in Urdu and then shifted to Hindi. 
? 1916: Premchand’s novel Sewasadan lifted the Hindi novel from the realm of 
fantasy, moralizing and simple entertainment to a serious reflection on the 
 
 
lives of ordinary and social issues. Sewasadan deals with the poor conditions 
of women, dowry and the hegemony of the Indian upper classes. 
? Novels in Bengal 
? There were two kinds of Bengali novels that emerged in the 19
th
 century: 
one was based on historical issues and the other was based on social 
problems and romantic relationships between men and women. 
? The new bhadralok found himself at home in the more private worlds of 
reading novels. 
? Initially, the Bengali novel used a colloquial style associated with urban life; 
it also used meyeli, the language associated with women’s speech. This style 
was replaced by Bankim Chandra Chattopadhyay’s prose, which was 
sanskritised but also contained a more vernacular style in it. 
? By the 20
th
 century, the power of telling stories in simple language made 
Sarat Chandra Chattopadhyay (1876-1938) the most popular novelist in 
Bengal and probably in the rest of India. 
? Uses of the Novel 
? Colonial administration found ‘vernacular’ novels a valuable source of information 
on native life and customs. Such information was useful for them in governing 
Indian society, with its large variety of communities and castes. 
? Books were translated into English, often by British administrators or Christian 
missionaries. 
? Indians used the novel as a powerful medium to criticise what they considered 
defects in the society and to suggest remedies. 
? Novels presented a glorified account of the past, which in turn created a sense of 
national pride among the readers. 
? Novels created a sense of collective belonging on the basis of one’s language. 
? The novels made their readers familiar with the ways in which people in other parts 
of their land spoke their languages. 
? Indian Women and the Novel 
? Women not only read novels but also started to write. 
? Novels allowed for a new kind of conception of womanhood. Women in South 
India began writing novels and short stories. 
? Ideas of a liberal environment and reform for women were presented in many 
works such as Rokeya Hossein’s Sultana’s Dream and Padmara. 
 
 
? Many women authors such as Hannah Mullen and Sailabala Ghosh Jaya wrote in 
secret. 
? Caste Practices, ‘Lower Castes’ and Minorities 
? Novels such as Indirabai and Indulekha were written by members of the upper castes, 
and were primarily about upper caste characters. 
? 1892: Pothere Kunjambu, a ‘lower caste’ writer from Kerala, wrote a novel called 
Saraswativijayam, which mounted a strong attack on caste oppression. 
? From the 1920s, a new kind of novel emerged that depicted the lives of peasants and 
‘low castes’. 
? Vaikkom Muhammad Basheer (1908-94) was one of the early Muslim writers to 
gain wide renown as a novelist in Malayalam. Basheer’s short novels and stories 
spoke about details from the everyday life of Muslim households, poverty, insanity 
and life in prison. 
? The Nation and its History 
? New educated minds wanted a new view of the past that would show that Indians 
could be independent minded and had been so in history. 
? 1857: Bhudeb Mukhopadhyay’s (1827-94) Anguriya Binimoy was published, and it 
became the first historical novel written in Bengal. 
? These novels produced a sense of a pan-Indian belonging. They could inspire actual 
political movements and raised questions about nation and nationality. 
? The Novel and Nation-Making 
? Novels included all kinds and classes of people in its narrative so that they could be 
seen to belong to a shared world. 
? Writers such as Premchand wrote novels that looked towards the future without 
forgetting the importance of the past. His works such as Rangbhoomi and Godan 
(1936) depict a community based on democratic values. 
? Rabindranath Tagore wrote about the condition of women and nationalism in his 
novels such as Ghare Baire (1916). 
 
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FAQs on NCERT Textbook Ch 8 : Novels, Society and History - Notes, Class 10, CBSE

1. What is the significance of novels in society and history?
Ans. Novels are significant in society and history as they provide insight into the cultural, social, and political aspects of a particular time period. They reflect the concerns, values, and beliefs of the society of that time and help us understand the historical context. Novels also have the power to shape public opinion and challenge dominant ideologies, making them an important tool for social and political change.
2. How do novels reflect the society of their time?
Ans. Novels reflect the society of their time by portraying the social, economic, and cultural realities of that period. They depict the social norms, customs, and traditions of the society and offer insights into the everyday lives of its people. Novels also reflect the political and economic systems of the time and the struggles faced by different classes and communities.
3. How do novels impact society?
Ans. Novels have a significant impact on society as they have the power to shape public opinion and challenge dominant ideologies. They can raise awareness and bring attention to social, political, and cultural issues, leading to social and political change. Novels can also promote empathy by enabling readers to understand the experiences and perspectives of others, fostering a more inclusive and compassionate society.
4. Can novels be used as a historical source?
Ans. Yes, novels can be used as a historical source as they provide insights into the cultural, social, and political aspects of a particular time period. They reflect the concerns, values, and beliefs of the society of that time and help us understand the historical context. However, it is important to critically evaluate the accuracy and authenticity of the novel as a historical source and consider the biases and perspectives of the author.
5. How do novels contribute to the development of language skills?
Ans. Novels contribute to the development of language skills by exposing readers to a variety of vocabulary, syntax, and writing styles. They help readers develop their reading comprehension, critical thinking, and analytical skills. Novels also enhance language fluency and provide opportunities for readers to improve their writing skills by studying the techniques and styles used by authors.
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