scholarly journals The Concepts of Home and Exile in The Mimic Men, a Novel by V.S. Naipaul

Author(s):  
Saman Abdulqadir Hussein Dizayi

The aim of this research is to analyze the presence of the concepts of “Exile and Home” in raising the identity crisis in V. S. Naipaul’s novel The Mimic Men (1967). It examines Edward Said’s theoretic contention of exile’s influence in creating identity crisis and in the view of Naipaul’s writing as an attempt to resolve the dilemma of the protagonist Ralph Singh’s identity. The chapter shows Ralph’s responses in endeavoring to form an individual identity while struggling from the burdens of colonial heritage. It is an irony or quiet paradox to apply, as this dissertation does, postcolonial theory to the postcolonial novels, or those novels depicting ex-colonial subject resistance to colonial traditions while living in the very heart of the colonial center, i.e., London; nevertheless, such an application reveals the conflicting sides of the characters’ identity, which has grown in part from attempting to fit in: "The mimic is a contradictory figure who simultaneously reinforces colonial authority and disturbs it".

Author(s):  
Saman A. Husain

The aim of this paper is to analyse and investigate the issue of identity in Tayeb Salih's novel Season of Migration to the North according to postcolonial theory.  Identity crisis refers to the context in which a person questions the whole idea of life. Philosophically, the identity crisis has been studied under the theories of existentialism. The term is coined to indicate a person, whose egoism and personality is filled with questions regarding life foundation, feeling and arguing that life has no value. in the novel by Tayeb Salih, Season of Migrating to the North, there are several instances that can be cited to indicate the existence of an identity crisis in the story. In this paper, we highlight and exemplify on such issues in an attempt to show how the theme of identity crisis has been presented in the novel. The paper considers the postcolonial theories of Edward Said, Frantz Fanon and Homi Bhabha to analyse the novel in terms of their representation of identity crisis. Keywords— tour guides, tour guide performance, tourist satisfaction, destination and customer loyalty.


1993 ◽  
Vol 10 (4) ◽  
pp. 545-547
Author(s):  
John Obert Voll

The interaction of societies and worldviews is one of the great themesof modem world history. Abdullah al-Ahsan makes an important contributionto the explanation and W1derstanding of these interactions in thecontext of the Islamic world. In particular, he concentrates on the issuesof ultimate sociopolitical identity and how it is affected by the attitudesand beliefs of modem Muslims: the dual loyalty to "nation" and to thegreater Islamic commnity (ummah).This book opens with a discussion of the term "um.mah" and its conceptualdevelopment in Islamic history. Then it addresses the develop­ment of nationalism in the modem world, particularly during the colonialera in Turkey, Egypt, and South Asia, and leading to "the identity crisisof the modem Muslim." Al-Ahsan concludes with a discussion of contemporarytransnational Muslim organizations, giving special attention to theOrganization of the Islamic Conference (OIC), which he describes as botha potentially ummatic entity and an organization of nation-states."The problematic relationship between European secular thought andtraditional Islamic ideas has created an identity crisis in contemporaryMuslim society" (p. 145), al-Ahsan says. This is not just a matter of thecoexistence of different identities within an individual or group, which isnatural; rather it involves defining a Muslim's "supreme loyalty." Forsuch a loyalty to be successful it should "be strong enough to generate asense of unity among its adherents and at the same time be flexibleenough to accommodate other identities within its fold" (p. 146). This isa matter of individual identity and "an adherent should have the freedom ...


Author(s):  
Saman Abdulqadir Hussein Dizayi

<div><p><em>This paper looks into the novel The Lonely Londoner by Samuel Selvon that is reviewed as a postcolonial novel. The paper examines the plight of the Caribbean migrants who traveled to England hoping that the fairytales they had been fed on by the colonizers were realistic and confined to England. The study considers the predicament that these migrants went through in their colonizer's homeland where they felt despised and derelict against their immense hope that they had when they were leaving their native islands. The paper also looks into the theme of mimicry as posted by Homi Bhabha in his postcolonial theory. By considering the view of Bhabha, the paper looks deeply into the theory advanced and how it is consequently used in the novel. Thus, the paper investigates how mimicry and hybridity have been portrayed in the novel The Lonely Londoner, and at the same time looks into how Samuel Selvon typically applied them to express his postcolonial discourse in his work.</em></p></div>


2006 ◽  
Vol 37 (8) ◽  
pp. 10-11
Author(s):  
ALAN ROCKOFF
Keyword(s):  

1984 ◽  
Vol 29 (3) ◽  
pp. 247-248
Author(s):  
Barry R. Schlenker
Keyword(s):  

1967 ◽  
Author(s):  
Frank T. Severin ◽  
Norma Rosenquist ◽  
Robert Hassinger
Keyword(s):  

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