
Ways of Being Free
Authenticity and Community in Selected Works of Rushdie, Ondaatje, and Okri
Adnan Mahmutovic(Author)
Rodopi (Publisher)
Published on 1. January 2012
Book
Paperback/Softback
250 pages
978-90-420-3534-8 (ISBN)
Description
Iconic migrant writers such as Michael Ondaatje, Salman Rushdie and Ben Okri use their fictional worlds to articulate the ways in which existential "nervous conditions," caused by violent postcolonial history, drive individuals to rework the critical notions of freedom, authenticity and community. This existential thread in their works has been largely ignored or left undeveloped in criticism. Although Rushdie has argued that they primarily write back to the imperial centre(s), in their signature novels, The English Patient, Midnight's Children and The Famished Road, they respond to their conflicting cultural and ethnic heritages by dramatizing characters in traumatic struggles with belonging and affiliation. As a way of coping with their identity crises, most characters succumb to the political rhetoric of communalism. The central characters, however, are driven by a powerful desire for self-sufficiency. Yet, since this individualism clashes with their need for communal sharing, they enact a form of creative destruction of their singular selfhood and communal identity. They experience a certain plurality of singular selfhood and participate in forms of "inoperative communities," which elicit bonds without ties and coexistence without the necessity of a common work and essence.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Leiden
Netherlands
Publishing group
Brill
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Product notice
Paperback (trade)
Unsewn / adhesive bound
Dimensions
Height: 233 mm
Width: 151 mm
Thickness: 20 mm
Weight
399 gr
ISBN-13
978-90-420-3534-8 (9789042035348)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Adnan Mahmutovic is a Bosnian-Swedish lecturer of literature in English, cultural studies, and creative writing at the Department of English, Stockholm University. Although his primary work has been focused on the postcolonial immigrant writers from South-East Asia and Africa, such as Rushdie, Ondaatje, Okri, and Khair, he has published academic and popular scientific articles on Coleridge, Von Trier, and some contemporary popular culture. His fiction has been anthologised and collected in How to Fare Well and Stay Fair (Salt publ), and his novel Thinner than a Hair came out with Cinnamon Press in 2010. He is currently the writer in residence at Stockholm University.
Content
Ways of Being Free: Introduction
War Is Everything's Father: History and Death as Causes of Existential Angst
Introduction: Causes of Existential Angst
Change and Changelessness in Midnight's Children
The Road of Existential Struggle in The Famished Road
History and the "Nervous Condition" in The English Patient
Death as a Drive to Meaningful Existence in Midnight's Children
Becoming Dead-to-the-World in The English Patient
Ideological Re-appropriation through Death in The Famished Road
Authenticity
Authenticity: Introduction
From Self-Sufficiency to Inoperative Community in The English Patient
Revolution Revisited in The Famished Road
From Communalism to the Comic Absurd in Midnight's Children
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index
War Is Everything's Father: History and Death as Causes of Existential Angst
Introduction: Causes of Existential Angst
Change and Changelessness in Midnight's Children
The Road of Existential Struggle in The Famished Road
History and the "Nervous Condition" in The English Patient
Death as a Drive to Meaningful Existence in Midnight's Children
Becoming Dead-to-the-World in The English Patient
Ideological Re-appropriation through Death in The Famished Road
Authenticity
Authenticity: Introduction
From Self-Sufficiency to Inoperative Community in The English Patient
Revolution Revisited in The Famished Road
From Communalism to the Comic Absurd in Midnight's Children
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index