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Chapter 5 - Violence, Indenture and Capitalist Realism in Amitav Ghosh’s Sea of Poppies

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 November 2022

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Summary

Abstract

Much recent literary criticism, predicated upon a binary opposition between the “past” and the “present”, prevents us from critically understanding a crucial group of literary texts which have emerged in the early twentieth century in Indian Anglophone literature. Realism remains, in Indian literature, a persistent presence, in spite of its many critiques, and it operates in far more complex ways than an unilinear documentation of the troubled present. Within novels that often move between the past and the present in metafictional forms, one may include Amitav Ghosh's Ibis Trilogy, Neel Mukherjee's The Lives of Others (2014) and Anjum Hasan's The Cosmopolitans (2015). In this essay, I am specifically concerned with how, in Amitav Ghosh's critically-acclaimed Sea of Poppies (2008), the social realist novels of the Indian regional languages of the 1930s and 1940s, constitute a significant metafictional presence, demonstrating a central element of the aesthetic politics of the “realist impulse” of the Indian novels in the contemporary era. I argue such novels form a significant element of Ghosh's metafictional archives precisely because they enable him to grapple with certain contradictions of world-historical dimensions. Such contradictions necessarily involve a deeper look into the complex lived and structural histories of capitalism's emergence and development in the sub-continent. But, they also constitute the possibility of resistances that the violences of capital necessarily engender, and the challenges of narrativizing the interlocked materialities of capital's violences and anti-capitalist resistances in and through novelistic forms.

Keywords: Amitav Ghosh; Capitalism; Indentured Labor; Realism; Postcolonialism

In her essay “The Realist Impulse and the Future of Postcoloniality”, literary critic Ulka Anjaria writes of the emergence of a new trend in contemporary Indian writing. She terms such a trend “realist impulse.” The “realist impulse”, Anjaria comments, “is a transition in representational mode, and/or medium that entails a new textual engagement with the contemporary world, as evident in gestures such as stories set in the present rather than the past and the trimming of modernist, metaphorical and metafictional language for a more stripped-down and less ostensibly self-conscious aesthetic. The impulse signals a new political urgency in both nonfiction and fiction writing alike.”

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India after World History
Literature, Comparison, and Approaches to Globalization
, pp. 115 - 150
Publisher: Amsterdam University Press
Print publication year: 2022

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