
K.S. Maniam’s Bestiary: Reading Animality and Identity in Selected Stories
Author(s) -
Agnes S. K. Yeow
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
southeast asian review of english
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.101
0ISSN - 0127-046X
DOI - 10.22452/sare.vol58no2.12
Subject(s) - bestiary , metaphor , diaspora , identity (music) , reading (process) , aesthetics , sociology , literature , art , anthropology , gender studies , philosophy , linguistics
This essay scrutinises K.S.Maniam’s fictional animals by going beyond the confines of metaphor to interrogate the concept of animality and how animality impinges on diasporic identity. I examine the writer’s impulse to animalise the notion of national belonging especially though thestrategic deployment of the animal mask which reveals the shared domination of migrant and animal. I argue that Maniam’s critique of animality not only suggests that migrant and animal lives are interlinked but also informs his re-envisioning of the diasporic self. I positthat Maniam’s “new diaspora”advances the notion of diasporic self as ‘becoming-animal.’