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Exploring Identity in the novels of Michael Ondaatje PDF

318 Pages·2014·12.77 MB·English
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Chitra Krishnan Exploring Identity in the novels of Michael Ondaatje Chitra Krishnan Exploring Identity in the novels ichael daatje Scholar's BM0661881 Impressum /Imprint Bibliografische Information der Deutschen Nationalbibliothek: Die Deutsche Nationalbibliothek verzeichnet diese Publikation in der Deutschen Nationalbibliografie; detaillierte bibliografische Daten sind im Internet über http://dnb.d-nb.de abrufbar. Alle in diesem Buch genannten Marken und Produktnamen unterliegen warenzeichen-, marken- oder patentrechtlichem Schutz bzw. sind Warenzeichen oder eingetragene Warenzeichen der jeweiligen Inhaber. Die Wiedergabe von Marken, Produktnamen, Gebrauchsnamen, Handelsnamen, Warenbezeichnungen u.s.w. in diesem Werk berechtigt auch ohne besondere Kennzeichnung nicht zu der Annahme, dass solche Namen im Sinne der Warenzeichen- und Markenschutzgesetzgebung ais frei zu betrachten waren und daher von jedermann benutzt werden dürften. Bibliographic information published by the Deutsche Nationalbibliothek: The Deutsche Nationalbibliothek lists this publication in the Deutsche Nationalbibliografie; detailed bibliographic data are available in the Internet at http://dnb.d-nb.de. Any brand names and product names mentioned in this book are subject to trademark, brand or patent protection and are trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective holders. The use of brand names, product names, common names, trade names, product descriptions etc. even without a particular marking in this works is in no way to be construed to mean that such names may be regarded as unrestricted in respect of trademark and brand protection legislation and could th us be used byanyone. Coverbild / Cover image: www.ingimage.com Verlag / Publisher: Scholar's Press ist ein Imprint der / is a trademark of OmniScriptum GmbH & Co. KG Heinrich-Bôcking-Str. 6-8, 66121 Saarbrücken, Deutschland / Germany Email: [email protected] Herstellung: siehe letzte Seite / Printed at: see last page ISBN: 978-3-639-71528-6 Copyright © 2014 OmniScriptum GmbH & Co. KG Alle Rechte vorbehalten./ Ali rights reserved. Saarbrücken 2014 Table of Contents Preface .................................................................................... 2 - 4 Chapter 1 : Diaspora and Identity .......................................... 5 - 49 Chapter Il : Deterioration of Identity .................................... 50 - 87 Chapter III : Reconstructing Identity .................................. 88 - 124 Chapter IV : Quest for Identity in skin of the Lion ............ 125 - 166 Chapter V : Unravelling Identity ....................................... 167 - 212 Chapter VI: Anil's Ghost.. ............................................... 213 - 251 Chapter VII : Reinventing Identity .................................... 252 - 293 Summing Up .................................................................... 294 -313 PREFACE A reading of Michael Ondaatje's The English Patient (1992) initiated me in my exploration of diaspora literature. The book is a highly acclaimed Booker Prize winner, and a haunting novel of four people who come to live together in an abandoned villa in Italy at the end of the Second World War. The book stirred a curiosity in me to read more of Ondaatje's novels. A prolific writer, Ondaatje has covered an array of themes spread across various locations and this reflects the diasporic nature of this multi-faceted author. Reading Ondaatje's novels made me highly appreciative of his creativity, humour, and a humanitarian treatment of people. Ondaatje's invaluable contribution to South Asian-Canadian diaspora literature has earned him a top place among diaspora writers. A careful reading of his novels made me realise the imaginative ways in which this author shows how his protagonists undergo different trials in life. The most striking aspect of his works is the underlying search for identity in ail of them. Ondaatje's intellect and critical depth are unsurpassed, and his contribution to South Asian Canadian Diaspora literature is unmatched in its portrayal of displaced people with unstable identities. Ali his novels echo the intensity of the inner struggles of people who may be transnationals or even people within the same country. Reading of his books touched a deep chord in my heart, and 1 felt an irresistible urge to take up the study of Ondaatje's novels. In the consideration of a versatile writer su ch as Ondaatje, this study focuses only on the search for identity which is the most distinctive feature of his works despite his representation of unique themes. 2 Divided into eight chapters, the tirst chapter Diaspora and Identity attempts to present some of the major theories of diaspora literature, namely migration, displacement, expatriate, immigrant, exile, nostalgia, longing, memory, past, loss or alienation, the insider-outsider which is also called the in-between condition, Third Space, space, place and time, self and identity, home, host country, maps, culture, language, hybridity, multiculturalism, transnationalism, colonialism, post-colonialism, orientalism, history, and postmodernism. There is a focus on Third World writers, South Asian writers, Canada, South Asian diaspora, Sri Lanka, the Sri Lankan Ethnie Conflict, writing in English in Sri Lanka with a mention of some famous Sri Lankan diaspora writers, especially MichaelOndaatje. The second chapter Deterioration of Identity deals with Ondaatje's first novel Coming Through Siaughter (1976). It probes the identity of a legendary Jazz musician Charles Buddy Bolden who gradually deteriorates mentally which leads to the loss of his identity as a musician. The third chapter entitled Reconstructing Identity which deals with Ondaatje's semi-tictional memoir Running in the Family (1982) is an attempt by the author to recreate his own identity from his hybrid lineage. The fourth chapter Quest for Identity discusses Ondaatje's next novel ln the Skin of a Lion (1987). The novel is set in Canada, and deals with the pursuit of identity not only by immigrants but also by a native Canadian searching for an identity of his own. The fifth chapter Unravelling Identity discusses The English Patient (1992) which won Ondaatje the Booker Prize, and depicts the revelations of the protagonists who come to live together in a deserted villa at the end of the Second World War. The sixth chapter Unearthing Identity is a study of Anil's Ghost (2000) which deals with a returning immigrant's challenge of discovering the identity of several unknown political murders in her native land. The seventh chapter titled Reinventing Identity is a study of Divisadero (2007) which shows how people rise from the ashes of their traumas, and reinvent new identities for themselves. The eighth chapter Summing Up reviews various diaspora theories, Ondaatje's supreme craftsmanship and the several ways and means by which the protagonists search for their identities. While every effort has been made to avoid repetition, nevertheless, it has become inevitable to make use of the same point in different contexts for discussion. However, without preju&ce to the argument, 1 have endeavoured to minimise repetition, and synonymous words of the term 'diaspora' (Iike: exile, immigrant, expatriate, sojourner, migrant) are used to avoid reiteration as far as possible. Ali the textual quotations are taken from the editions listed in the bibliography that has followed the Seventh Edition of the MLA Handbook 4 CHAPTER 1 : DIASPORA AND IDENTITY Human history has included a number of diasporas and some historians have made the phenomenon a focus of study for they consider diaspora to be a multiple journey leading to complicit spaces where various discourses are created and negotiated. These territories evoke emotional, social, political, economic, cultural and literary affiliations that find expression in multiple ways. Diaspora is marked by struggle over meanings both amongst the diasporics and with people in the countries where they now inhabit. Being uprooted from one's native land and culture is a colossal experience for an individual and his or her culture, so the study of Diasporas is very important. Originating from the Greek word meaning 'to scatter and to sow,' it originally referred to the traumatic exile and settlement of Jews outside Palestine following the Babylonian exile (586 B.C.) and ended in the Holocaust of World War II. Connotations of a 'diaspora' situation were usually associated with forced displacement, victimisation, alienation, loss. Today, it a term often used today to describe any population which has originated in a land other than which it currently resides, and whose social, economic and political networks cross the borders of nation-states and are considered to be 'de-territorialised' or 'transnational. ' Author James Procter writes that, '''diaspora' can appear both as naming a geographical phenomenon - the traversai of physical terrain by an individual or a group - as weil as a theoretical concept: a way of thinking, or of representing the world." i It is this latter epistemological sense of the term which demands that issues of 5

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Michael Ondaatje’s diasporic background determines his themes of home identity and migration. His texts represent his first home, Sri Lanka and heighten sensitive issues such as the dehumanizing horrors of war. His first novel Coming Through Slaughter (1976) is about the New Orleans jazz pioneer B
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