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Sangma, Ramona M.
- Naipaul's Kashmir Sojourn in An Area of Darkness
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1 Department of English, North-Eastern Hill, University, Tura Campus, Meghalaya, IN
1 Department of English, North-Eastern Hill, University, Tura Campus, Meghalaya, IN
Source
Journal of Literature, Culture and Media Studies, Vol 5, No 9-10 (2013), Pagination: 21-26Abstract
An Area of Darkness is the first of V.S. Naipaul's trilogy on India. In 1962, India was no longer a British Colony. Almost two decades had passed since Independence;it was the era of Nehru, the ideals of Gandhi, an independent nation no longer at its infancy. It was also the land of Naipaul's ancestors, forced to leave due to poverty and impoverishment. To Naipaul, India was both familiar and strange, and unlike his travels to other erstwhile colonies of the British Empire, his journey to India was far more personal. The second section of the book is a vivid and a cohesive account of his visit to Kashmir. It recounts events and incidents, of people some of whom the author formed short personal relationships with. The narrative is one of amusement, grudging affection, and implied brief, albeit welcome discovery of the India he envisioned. The section serves as an interlude from the disillusionment and cynicism that dominates the rest of the narrative.Keywords
Identity, Antithesis, Denial and Negation, Myth, Disillusionment, Roots, Colonialism, Colonizer, Cross Cultural.References
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- Naipaul, V S. 1964. An Area of Darkness. London, Picador.
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