Objective: It is of interest to investigate the in vitro cyto toxicity effects of chloroformic extract of Novel polyherbal
formulation were studied. Materials and Methods: Cytotoxicity of the crude extract of polyherbal formulation was
evaluated on LLCMK2 monkey kidney epithelial cells and Cell viability was determined by using MTT assay. Results and
Discussion: Our results indicate that the non toxic nature of a poly herbal formulation of Novel polyherbal formulation on
control and experimental cell lines. Conclusion: The current mode of treatment for various diseases including cancer is
based on synthetic drugs. These drugs are effective but they show serious adverse effects and also alter the genetic and
metabolic activity of the patient. Furthermore, in vivo activity of the active compounds of a poly herbal formulation
Novel polyherbal formulation needs to be determined in animal models and human subjects, so as to determine their
efficacy in a metabolic environment.
Abstract:The representation of the practice of sati, the immolation of widows on their husbands' funeral pyre, has garnered interest for long from postcolonial and feminist discourses among others. While advocates of Western modernity perceive sati as a murderous ritual, the proponents of orthodox Hinduism, on the contrary, claim sati to be a courageous cult of "wifely devotion". In both bigoted beliefs, as poststructuralists observe, women largely appear as "mute objects". Amitav Ghosh's Sea of Poppies (2008) brilliantly sidelines the conundrum of polarizing representation of sati along the East-West axis and reflects instead the subjective experience of women as sati. The article examines how the rhetoric and ritual of sati in the novel enable marginalized women to acquire consciousness of their subjectivity in a colonized society. To this end, the paper analyzes deconstructive readings of sati, such as by Gayatri Spivak, and explores the way the novel uses religion as a ploy, which, instead of perpetrating violence, confers a subjective entity on the sati that can even subvert the constrictive norms of a colonized society.
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