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Among the mimic men: The fictional works of V. S. Naipaul

Posted on:1987-03-29Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:Purdue UniversityCandidate:Mann, Harveen SachdevaFull Text:PDF
GTID:1475390017959296Subject:Literature
Abstract/Summary:
In an age given to literary experimentation, V. S. Naipaul ;This dissertation evaluates Naipaul's artistic development by examining the theme of mimicry in his fiction and commenting upon his contemporary relevance as he moves beyond "the regional barrier" of Trinidad to explore imposture in the larger world.;The "apprentice" works, Miguel Street, The Mystic Masseur, and The Suffrage of Elvira, establish the dominant categories of mimics at the same time that they reveal Naipaul's complex attitude toward mimicry. Critical of the inauthenticity of modern Trinidadians, he nevertheless delights in his early characters, appreciating their impostures as historically inevitable.;A House for Mr Biswas and Mr Stone and the Knights Companion, Naipaul's "English" novel, reflect a variation in Naipaul's view of mimicry: he portrays the eponymous heroes as not just imitators and tricksters but artists who through their creations forge authentic identities. "A Flag on the Island" returns to a Caribbean setting where the islanders enact the roles of happy-go-lucky natives foisted on them by American tourists and entrepreneurs. Yet the reader detects a growing self-awareness in the characters that promises hope for the future.;The Mimic Men, the fictional autobiography of an exiled Caribbean politician, is Naipaul's tribute to the healing quality of art. Through writing about and understanding his past, Ralph Singh transcends mimicry to achieve a unified identity. In a Free State and Guerillas are, by contrast, Naipaul's most pessimistic works. They present no escape from mimicry through art; and violence erupts as the characters are reduced to puppets in a deterministic universe.;A Bend in the River demonstrates a more tolerant view of human action. Africa becomes symbolic of the corruption in the human heart, but knowledge of that corruption augurs well for the future, establishing Naipaul's belief in man's moral progress.
Keywords/Search Tags:Naipaul's, Works
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