Speaking Havoc: Social Suffering and South Asian Narratives Nagappan Ramu
Speaking Havoc: Social Suffering and South Asian Narratives Nagappan Ramu Who has the right to speak about trauma? As a result, the text's act of speaking havoc rebounds in unsettling ways.Speaking…
Specifikacia Speaking Havoc: Social Suffering and South Asian Narratives Nagappan Ramu
Speaking Havoc: Social Suffering and South Asian Narratives Nagappan Ramu
Who has the right to speak about trauma? As a result, the text's act of speaking havoc rebounds in unsettling ways.Speaking Havoc investigates how literary and cinematic fictions intervene in the politics and reception of social suffering. As cultural products, narratives of social suffering paradoxically release us from responsibility while demanding that we examine our own connectedness to the circumstances that produce suffering.
These works confront squarely a number of ethical dilemmas in representations of social suffering--the catastrophes and innumerable minor Amitav Ghosh's modernist novel The Shadow Lines (1988), A Fine Balance (1995) by Rohinton Mistry, the short stories of Saadat Hasan Manto, Salman Rushdie's postmodernist novel Shame (1983), and the spectacular films of Maniratnam: each bears witness to social violence in South Asia.