
Wound and Loss In Naipaul’s India: A Wounded Civilization and an Area of Darkness
Author(s) -
Babu Ram Khanal
Publication year - 2019
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2091-0916
DOI - 10.3126/tuj.v33i1.28686
Subject(s) - civilization , functional illiteracy , darkness , ignorance , poverty , caste , ancient history , history , section (typography) , geography , political science , archaeology , law , biology , botany , business , advertising
This study explores the pain and multifaceted loss in Naipaul’s novels: India: a Wounded Civilization and An Area of Darkness. In the first part of this research, pain and loss of the aborigines have been exposed. It challenges the nationalist discourse of the India’s progress. The second part, mapping culture through the novel is divided into two sections. The first section- "India: A Wounded Civilization" deals with the condition of India in the post independent period. It claims that India has been wounded for many centuries of British Raj. The second section follows "An Area of Darkness." Naipaul assumes that India is still in darkness. People are living in illiteracy, ignorance and poverty. In addition to caste system practiced in different communities has shadowed the pure and mounted image of India. The last section is the conclusion of the research. It sums up the whole claims and textual analysis of the research.