Title of article
Unhomeliness and Hybridity in V. S. Naipaul’s Half a Life and Magic Seeds
Author/Authors
Borbor، Taraneh نويسنده University of Tehran ,
Issue Information
دوفصلنامه با شماره پیاپی 0 سال 2015
Pages
16
From page
114
To page
129
Abstract
In this study, the notions of homelessness and unhomeliness are studied in 2 novels
by Naipaul: Half a Life (2001) and Magic Seeds (2004). Naipaul has been viewed by
many postcolonial critics as an imperially complicit writer, for his controversial
views of places and societies, particularly his disdain for non-Western societies.
This study examines whether the imperatives of the postcolonial context, where
boundaries and idealistic vision of place are unsettled, have influenced Naipaul’s
view of places and ways of belonging to them. It is argued that his recent novels
accept that the reality of homelessness renders the quest for home futile and
approves of cultural exchange and hybridity as possible ways of belonging.
However, the 2 novels show possibility as only tenable in certain Western societies
(like England) and refuses to accept the possibility of hybridity and cultural
exchange in postcolonial societies.
Journal title
Journal of Research in Applied Linguistics
Serial Year
2015
Journal title
Journal of Research in Applied Linguistics
Record number
2217759
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