
Gandhi in 1975 and especially it projects the lives of the four unfortunate individuals namely Dina Dalal, Omprakash, Ishvar Darji and Maneck Kohlah allied by the same string of overpowering fate. His second novel A Fine Balance (1995) gives hideous details of the immoral and unlawful Emergency imposed by the Prime Minister Mrs. Bombay has become a perennial source of inspiration in his writings. Rohinton Mistry being an eminent novelist from the group of second generation postcolonial diasporic writers, writes about India with profuse vigour and dynamism. It presents how different, and often contradictory, discourses on dalits both incorporated and interrogated in Indian literature I will analyse the position to which dalits are allocated, in both cultural and political discourses, in relation to the contested conception of the Indian nation, in civil society, and in the Hindu community. The present journal explores the humiliation, torture and problems of residence faced by untouchables. I am particularly interested in the use of the idea of tragedy in mistry's novel. This paper systematically set out to destabilize hegemonies based on cast, gender and class.

My wish is to highlight the harsh reality of the suppression struggle and torture dalits face every day of their miserable lives. This paper intends to the study the representation of untouchables in Rohinton mistry's A Fine Balance (1995).I wish to present the devastating effects of the cast system on the educational, social, and economical status of untouchables in Indian society.
