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The Stephenie Meyer and Twilight Phenomenon

Written by eastern writer on Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Stephenie Meyer sold 26.5 million books in 2009. Following in J.K. Rowling’s footsteps she is the latest huge success in what is commonly termed ‘cross-over’ fiction. Cross- over fiction transcends the usual categories of ‘adult’ and ‘teenage’ writing. If someone is spotted reading a Stephenie Meyer book on the tube or at the bus stop the person engrossed in their copy of Twilight is almost as likely to be a middle aged woman as an adolescent girl.

What is Stephenie Meyer’s the Twilight Phenomenon?

Stephenie Meyer’s Twilight saga is made up of the books Twilight, Eclipse, New Moon and Breaking Dawn. The popularity of Meyer’s Twilight has resulted in vampire mania with a whole new generation of vampire books appearing on bookshop shelves and flooding supermarket book sections.

The Twilight books follow the romance between clumsy new-to-town Bella Swan and the beautiful Edward Cullen. There is just one major problem facing the relationship – the fact that Edward just happens to be a vampire. And as if that isn’t enough the relationship is also put under further stress by the close affinity between Bella and Edward’s love rival Jacob. Jacob’s and Edward’s families don’t get on. The reason? Jacob is a werewolf.

Controversies around Stephenie Meyer and the Twilight books

There have been a number of controversies about Stephenie Meyer’s books

* Disputes about the quality of her writing
* The influence of her religious beliefs
* The leaking of a fifth novel before its completion

Disputes about the Quality of Stephenie Meyer’s Writing

The author’s writing style has been heavily criticised by some while others view her as a highly talented and sklilful writer. Perhaps the truth is somewhere in between. The Twilight books may not be great literary masterpieces in the tradition of English classics but her writing style is effective. Like J.K. Rowling she tells an absorbing story and her style of writing doesn’t jar in a way that obstructs the unfolding of the tale.

The Influence of Meyer’s Religious Beliefs

Stephenie Meyer belongs to the Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter-day Saints. As a Mormon she has professed and strict religious beliefs. She has been criticised by some as pushing her ideologies through the content of her fiction. Since her books were released Meyer has featured strongly on the list of books that users have asked to be banned from US libraries.

It’s true that sex does not really appear in Stephanie Meyer’s novels and that the belief that a vampire does not have a soul is a major reason why Edward does not want Bella to sacrifice her humanity. While Meyer herself accepts that her writing is inevitably coloured by her beliefs she disputes any motivation to consciously preach or peddle religious ideology through her fiction.

J.K. Rowling’s books in the past have also had complaints. In Rowlings case this has been with regard to the representation of magic in the novels as well as the depiction of dysfunctional families. Perhaps the very volume of success inevitably generates much negative as well as positive response.
The Leaking of Meyer’s Fifth Novel

Stephenie Meyer was in the process of writing a fifth novel in the Twilight series. However this book was put on hold with no current intentions by the author to finish the tale off. The title of the leaked book was Midnight Sun. This was not a sequel to the already existing books but, interestingly it was to be the retelling of the events in Twilight told from the perspective of Edward Cullen. The twelve existing chapters now appear on the author’s web site.
What is the attraction of the Twilight saga?

The success of all fiction in some ways depends on a delicate balance of ‘familiarity’ and ‘uniqueness’. The reader must be able to empathise with situations and characters but also discover something new or see things from a slightly different perspective. Regardless of controversies over the quality of writing and her personal religious beliefs, Stephenie Meyer’s addictive tales of vampires and werewolves allow us to explore or re-discover the thrills and trials of young (or even older) love in a totally different setting.


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The Twilight Phenomenon

Written by eastern writer on Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Have you read the Twilight saga? If not, you are one of the only people in the world who haven't. Okay, maybe not that extreme, but most tweens certainly have read the book, and seen the movie. The book Twilight, by Stephenie Meyers has taken the tween world by storm. It is a saga about humans and vampires. It is a fantastic story that has captured the hearts and minds of tweenage girls everywhere. Here are some of the reasons why Twilight is such a big deal:

Gives teen girls a story they can relate to.
One of the reasons Twilight is so popular among tweens is that it is about girls just slightly older than they are. It talks about first love, the awkward stages of trying to fit in, and being a girl. It helps these teens feel like the challenges they face, the dreams they have of having a boy notice them, and more are not just normal, but that the ultimate dream of acceptance is possible. Bella, the lead girl in Twilight is liked by most of the guys in the school. Girls want to relate to it.

The girl who gets the unattainable boy.
One of the main reasons this story has taken the world by storm is that it offers the fulfillment of every tween girl's fantasy. The unattainable, good looking, amazing guy, that every girl in the school secretly fantasizes about likes her! This is the guy that every girl wants, and in the story, the awkward, new girl who isn't exactly sure of herself is the one who gets him. This gives tween girls hope. It sets their hearts all a flutter. It gives them a glimpse into a world they dream about, and it is fun to visit it.

Fun escape into fantasy world.
In addition to being relatable, and a book that gets tween girl's hearts a beating, it also offers a fun escape into fantasy world. There are vampires, and werewolves, and mythical, fantastic creatures. There is endless money, beauty, and ability, which makes these people and stories not just fun and interesting, but something entertaining and fascinating.

With over 40 million books sold in 40 countries it is not surprising, but interesting that tweens love this story so much. This story gives them a fun, fantastic love story to cling to. It gives them a fun way to be entertained.

The Twilight Saga took the tween world by storm because it has everything humans, especially girls age 8-12, get passionate about. Good, bad, fantasy, love, the sensitive brooding leading guy, the dorky, but beautiful girl, a love triangle with people fighting over the girl, love struck teens, and all more as a normal part of everyday life. It is a phenomenon because kids want these stories to be their own realities, so they can get lost in it, and enjoy it.

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Beverly Frank is mom to two young kids and a writer. Visit http://www.surfnetparents.com for more parenting advice and ideas.

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Twilight series: Feminism and the vampire novel

Written by eastern writer on Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Much has been written about sexism in the Twilight books and film. Here, Caitlin Brown puts the series in context of other popular vampire fiction

Feminism and the vampire novel have not traditionally been particularly well-suited bedfellows. The prototype of the genre, the shadow which lurks behind each and every modern vampire novel, is of course Bram Stoker’s Dracula, a novel which combines a mastery of atmosphere and suspense with a decidedly misogynistic mythology.

In recent years, however, the vampire text has evolved to encompass a narrative structure and an attitude towards women which moves beyond the virginal victim/deadly whore dichotomy that characterised the genre’s precursors. All of which makes Stephenie Meyer’s Twilight series and its retrograde take on the role of women all the more infuriating. The success of the Twilight books has wrenched the vampire genre out of dark obscurity into blinding publicity; but the books have also dispensed with many of the features which make contemporary supernatural literature so interesting.

Meyer’s response to accusations of sexism in her books is to claim that, “When I hear or read theories about Bella being an anti-feminist character, those theories are usually predicated on her choices.” However, the real reason Bella is not a feminist heroine is because Meyer fails to develop the role of women in the supernatural novel much beyond what Stoker achieved more than a century previously.

At the crux of sexism within the vampire novel is the paradigm of male vamp/female human, a framework which an overwhelming majority of vampire novels are based around. The consequence of this is to represent the male as virtually unassailable in terms of power, and generally intellectually superior due to the centuries of wisdom he has accumulated. It is also a rare vamp novel which features a male (anti)hero not in possession of dazzlingly good looks and the ability to persuade a mouldy carrot into bed with one devastating glance. The female human is physically weaker and, at least traditionally, unable to resist the lure of the dashing corpse. These are tropes which vampire narratives such as Joss Whedon’s Buffy the Vampire Slayer have delighted in overturning, yet in one form or another they remain pervasive in the supernatural novel.

In Dracula, the women are faced with two equally unappealing alternatives: forsake their initial quasi-independence and embrace the status of victimhood which the men in the text (both supernatural and otherwise) combine to foist upon them; or give in to the seduction of the vampire and so gain power - but a power which is represented in the text as sexualised and therefore, according to the morality of the novel, demonic. (Much as all female sexuality is deemed demonic in literature of a certain stance, both supernatural and otherwise.) The same ‘choices’ which Meyer parades as being Bella’s own in the Twilight series, and therefore above criticism, are in reality almost as narrow.

The male vamp/female human set up is a preconfigured metaphor for the dominance of men within society


For most of the series, she can choose only between relying on vampire Edward or werewolf Jacob for salvation from whatever big bad is gunning for her, or relying on Edward to allow her to become a vampire so that she too has access to the power which only he can bestow.

The imbalance of power between men and women in many vampire novels can also be attributed to the capability of the male vampire to completely subsume any independent desires or individuality on the part of the female heroine.

In Dracula, both Mina and Lucy are compelled by the Count to work against their allies. Their own opposing wishes and agency are completely overtaken by the control which he exerts over them. While Jonathan is subject to the same mind control, he manages to maintain a sense of his own identity, and eventually escape from Dracula. The women in the novel are represented as incapable of sustaining any individuality in the face of Dracula’s power.

Of course, this is a scenario which will be eminently familiar to ‘Twihards’, mirroring as it does Edward’s control of all Bella’s actions and restriction of her choices. Bella’s sense of self is so dependent on Edward that his absence in the second book of the series, New Moon, causes her to enter a state of near-catatonic depression. Some critics have termed Edward’s actions in the series emotional abuse and this is certainly apt, but it is also an extension of an attitude towards women that is hardly new in the vampire novel. Sherrilyn Kenyon’s series of vampire romances occupy a similar vein of literature, with their focus on submissive heroines who gladly relinquish their agency to the alpha vamps/shapeshifters/gods they encounter, despite initial protestations of independence and a bit of mandatory soul-searching.

Meanwhile, the representation of vampires has long been linked to fears of the foreign Other, since the Eastern European spectre of the Count. As other critics of Twilight have pointed out, Meyer substitutes this for what amounts to a fetishisation of whiteness. The translucent beauty of Bella and Edward’s pale skin is lingered on obsessively and contrasted unfavourably to Jacob’s “russet” appearance.

Her continued insistence that an extremity of whiteness is integral to beauty and superiority of character (which Edward represents) is nothing if not problematic.

Issues of race are on the whole not dealt with particularly well by the supernatural novel. The television series True Blood has been criticised for its insulting portrayal of black women, for example its use of the stereotype of the “sassy black sidekick”. Yet the depiction of black women - or indeed any women not in possession of snow white skin - in other vampire stories is most noticeable for its shocking absence. The paucity of such characters highlights the fact that the vamp novel may have worked out some of its issues with women but when it comes to race, Twilight is far from the only vampire novel which severely disappoints.

All of this is not to say that the vampire novel is inherently anti-feminist. The power dynamic of male vamp/female human is in fact uniquely set up for the possibilities of subversion and exploration of the nature of power in any male/female relationship. It is a preconfigured metaphor for the dominance of men within society and the varied responses to this power imbalance available open to women.

If Dracula set in place many of the more sexist features of the supernatural novel, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, also designed to have real-world relevance, paved the way for more intimate relations between the vamp text and feminism. In the world of Buffy, the male vampire with his supernatural powers is countered by a woman with powers of her own, continually underestimated by her opponents.

The misadventures of these female heroines do not compromise their independence or their integrity


In Buffy’s battles with vampires she does not always succeed, but what it is important is that the outcome is not predetermined - she will not inevitably give in to her male opponent’s superior strength and power. By the end of the series, Buffy’s slaying aptitude and strength develop to the point where her once threatening foes are increasingly represented as irritants rather than equal opponents. The vampire novel with aspirations of equality will generally give the female heroine some sort of power of her own with which to counter the vampire. Karen Chance’s heroine Cassandra Palmer is a clairvoyant; Sookie Stackhouse, of Charlaine Harris’ Southern Vampire Mysteries, made into the TV show True Blood, is a telepath; Laurell K. Hamilton’s Anita Blake can both kick ass and raise the dead.

The sparkly vamp aficionados will now point out that Twilight’s Bella too has powers; her mind acts as a natural shield against any kind of telepathic interference. Yes, but Bella’s power is one of negativity. She has the ability to not have her mind interfered with, although for most of the series not even the ability to choose to use this power. Bella’s power gives her no agency, no possibility to redress the power imbalance which exists between men and women in the novel. The dynamic of male vamp vs. human female which characterises many supernatural novels is not necessarily anti-feminist, as the examples above demonstrate, but Meyers chooses to disallow her heroine access to the power accorded to the male protagonists of the series.

The vampire novel is suffused with desire, defined further by this miasma of fantasy which imbues its language and its narrative. The act of biting a victim, of transforming a human to a vampire, is inevitably linked to sex. This transformation is generally either explicitly linked to sex, as in Anne Rice’s Interview with a Vampire, or is used as a thinly veiled metaphor for the sexual act, as in Dracula. Both Charlaine Harris and Karen Chance imagine the acts as mingled in their series of books. The ability to turn someone into a vampire is usually the prerogative of the male, and so sexual power in the vampire novel tends to reside with men.

The female heroine is often represented as yearning for the vampire to exercise his sexual power over her, yet in the best contemporary vampire novels the writer uses this desire to explore the nature of fantasy and equality within relationships. Anita Blake, Sookie Stackhouse and Cassandra Palmer each become increasingly assertive in achieving the fulfilment of their sexual desires, as at times several of the books in these series become less about the bloodlust, and more about the lust to bang anything without a pulse. But crucially, the misadventures of these female heroines do not compromise their independence or their integrity. The fantasy of submission to the vamp lover is fulfilled, but this is not the end of the story; the balance of power can change, and this desire in itself need not lead to a fundamentally unequal power dynamic between men and women in the novel.

I admit it; whatever scruples I may have, I was gripped


In Dracula, Lucy’s linked experience of sex/vampirism results in new supernatural, physical and sexual powers. However, once in possession of these powers, Lucy is represented as divested of the attributes of both humanity and femininity which characterised her previously. Power and femininity are not mutually compatible in the world Stoker created. In Twilight also, Bella gains power only through becoming a vampire, which is a result of her much-awaited sexual liaison with Edward. This vampiric power of Bella’s ultimately comes to her due only to Edward’s decision to grant her with it.

This reluctant bestowal of power is linked to the denial of the fulfilment of desire within the text. Twilight throbs with sexual longing, and this tension is part of what makes the books so compelling. (I admit it; whatever scruples I may have, I was gripped.) Yet, whatever intentions Meyer may have had with regards to the abstinence storyline, desire in the context of the vamp novel is a means by which the female heroine can explore power and fantasy, and so the abstinence within Twilight signifies a denial of the power that comes with the fulfilment of sexual fantasy. Authority over both the sexual experience and access to power remain with Edward.

The modern vampire novel is overwhelmingly a text written by women, and featuring female heroines. The narrative voice within in the vampire novel is usually female and this in itself lends a certain power to the heroine: the power to tell the story from her point of view, a power not accorded to the male vampire. Certainly, Bella is the narrator of her own story for most of the series, but she loses this agency just before her transformation into a vampire and consequent gain in power. Any advances the fourth book could be seen to make in terms of equality - the introduction of several strong, powerful female characters, Bella’s new abilities which in some ways exceed Edward’s - are negated by the images of the preceding chapters. Bella as helpless vassal, stripped of agency and voice, and devoured from within as a result of the clash between Edward’s power and her own feeble, female humanity cannot be easily rendered equal in the chapters that follow. Meyer’s insistence on perpetuating a power imbalance in her novels means that any claim she may eventually have to feminism in the texts is entirely shot to hell.

The feminist vampire novel is certainly possible, although when it comes to equal representations of a wide spectrum of different women the choices narrow significantly. With regards to Twilight, not only does the treatment of race leave much to be desired, but in many other ways it fails to measure up to its supernatural counterparts. While other contemporary vampire novels use the power dynamic of the vamp novel as a way of exploring the nature of power, desire and fantasy, Twilight’s denial of the importance of these means that in this eminently popular modern novel, little has changed in terms of the relative roles of men and women since the publication of Dracula in 1897.


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About the author

Caitlin Brown is a recent graduate currently trying to stave off the pain of real life with a never-ending stream of fantasy novels


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Why People Get Lost in Books

Written by son of rambow on Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Any avid reader knows the power of a book to transport you into another world, be it the wizard realm of "Harry Potter" or the legal intrigue of the latest John Grisham.

Part of the reason we get lost in these imaginary worlds might be because our brains effectively simulate the events of the book in the same way they process events in the real world, a new study suggests.

The new study, detailed in the July 21 issue of the journal Psychological Science, builds on previous work that links the way our brains process images and written words to the way they process actions we perform ourselves.

Examining these links could shed light on why some people enjoy reading more than others and how our reading abilities change with time. Essentially, some people might paint a more vivid mental picture of written prose than others.

Kick in the brain

Previous studies have monitored how the brain processes video, written words, images and other stimuli, and compared them to how it processes first-hand experiences. These studies have shown that the brain processes these two types of stimuli similarly.

For example, reading a simple verb such as "run" or "kick" activates some of the same regions of the brain that would be activated when we actually go running or kick a ball.

But reading a single word isn't quite the same as reading a long, continuous passage. Jeffrey Zacks and his colleagues at Washington University in St. Louis set out to see whether the same pattern held for continuous reading by monitoring the brain processes of study participants with functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) scans.

The 28 study participants (20 women and 8 men) spent about 10 minutes reading four narratives, each less than 1,500 words, taken from the book "One Boy's Day." The words from the book were flashed onto a screen that the participants could read on a mirror in front of their faces.

The book follows a school-age boy during a typical day, and was created by psychologists as a research tool. The passages were used in this study because they were a simple narrative of everyday activities that participants would easily relate to and process.

The book "avoids some of the novelistic techniques that would make it a little harder for us to generalize back to the understanding of real life," Zacks said, such as skipping around through time or long inner monologues.

Brain activation

The researchers coded the four narratives for six types of changes "that people might be monitoring while they're comprehending" — changes they would notice both in everyday life and possibly in reading, Zacks said. These changes included: spatial changes (when a location changed); object changes (when a character picked up a ball, say); character changes; causal changes (when an activity occurs that wasn't directly caused by the activity in a previous clause); and goal changes (when a character begins an action with a new goal).

Monitoring such changes in the environment is adaptive, because it likely helped our ancestors to predict what might happen next: where prey might dart to next or what a predator might do. Similarly, today it helps us predict what might happen next in a story.

Essentially, Zacks and his team were trying to suss out how a reader parses an ongoing text into meaningful events.

After the participants had read the passages, the researchers would ask them questions to see if they recognized where these changes occurred in the text. They then looked at the fMRI data to see if brain activity in key areas spiked with the changes — it did.

"It turns out that there are focal areas that are selectively involved in each of these kinds of processing," Zacks said.

The data doesn't show quite the same specificity that studies where participants read a single word show. For example, while reading the phrase "raise right arm" might activate the area of the brain that controls that action, reading that phrase in the context of a longer passage only shows activation in the general motor control areas of the brain.

Zacks is optimistic though that the results showing more specific match-ups "are going to generalize to continuous reading;" they will just take more testing and lots of data, he said.

Individual differences

Understanding how our brains process the events and changes while reading could help us understand some of the individual differences in reading, for example, why some people are sucked in by stories more than others.

While some readers can actually picture what they read, others may not.

"There are readers, competent readers, who say 'I have no pictures in my head when I read'," Zacks said.

Further studies could see whether there really is a difference between how the brains of these two types of people process the words and phrases they read.

"It may be the case that some people do this more than others," Zacks said.

With further study, Zacks also hopes to tease out how this brain processing changes across life span, and how it is affected by diseases such as age-related dementia and other neurophysiological changes.

The current study was funded in part by the National Institute of Mental Health and the American Psychological Association (which publishes the journal Psychological Science).

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By Andrea Thompson, Senior Writer. This article officially published here

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Twilight altering teen minds

Written by son of rambow on Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Scientists probe how young adult books, movies influence adolescents

It's a potentially sucky situation. The vampire craze in teen literature – exemplified by the "Twilight" book series – could be affecting the dynamic workings of the teenage brain in ways scientists don't yet understand.

"We don't know exactly how literature affects the brain, but we know that it does," said Maria Nikolajeva, a Cambridge University professor of literature. "Some new findings have identified spots in the brain that respond to literature and art."

Scientists, authors and educators met in Cambridge, England, Sept. 3-5 for a conference organized by Nikolajeva to discuss how young-adult books and movies affect teenagers' minds.

"For young people, everything is so strange, and you cannot really say why you react to things – it's a difficult period to be a human being," Nikolajeva told LiveScience. The conference, she said, brought together "people from different disciplines to share what we know about this turbulent period we call adolescence."

Sessions included "What Is It About Good Girls and Vampires?" addressing the huge popularity of Stephenie Meyer's "Twilight" series and other vampire-themed books. [ The Real Science & History of Vampires ]

Brain science
Teenagers' minds are more susceptible than adult minds to influence – from peers and experiences as well as from books, movies and music, researchers say.

"What we have learned over the past decade is that the teenage brain processes information differently than a more mature brain," said conference presenter Karen Coats, a professor of English at Illinois State University who integrates neuroscience into her research. "Brain imaging shows that teens are more likely to respond to situations emotionally, and they are less likely to consider consequences through rational forethought."
That's because the teenage prefrontal cortex, the part of the brain responsible for reasoning and risk assessment, goes through a growth spurt before puberty, followed by a period of organizing and pruning of the neural pathways, Coats said.

Linguistic anthropologist Shirley Brice Heath of Stanford University, a keynote speaker at the conference, is studying how reading longer novels habituates the brain toward a greater capacity for sustained attention to visual material.

"What neuroscience opens for us is what happens within the brain during specific activities that take place within identifiable emotional or motivational states," Heath said by e-mail. "For example, we know now that in reading about particular activities (especially those known to the readers), motor-neuronal activity is detected."

Is Bella a good role model?
Attendees at the conference included experts in neuroscience, psychology, art, literature and music, as well as writers such as Meg Rosoff, author of "How I Live Now" and other teen titles.

While teens might be turning the pages of " Twilight " for the plot and romance, other takeaways from the books may be having a lasting impact, too.

Discuss: Is reading 'Twilight' affecting your teen's mind?

The series follows Bella, a teenage girl who falls in love with a much older vampire named Edward. Some critics have argued that Bella's passivity, and the story's abstinence-until-marriage message, are anti-feminist.

"If you look very, very clearly at what kind of values the 'Twilight' books propagate, these are very conservative values that do not in any way endorse independent thinking or personal development or a woman's position as an independent creature," Nikolajeva said. "That's quite depressing."

Dark vs. light

Researchers are interested in how such dark works might affect young minds, and why teenagers are especially drawn to stories with vampires, zombies, and post-apocalyptic and dystopian themes.

"We all remember being teenage is a difficult period, full of contradictions – dark feelings one day, joyful feelings the next. The 'Twilight' books are very much about this, about budding sexuality and not really knowing what you are," Nikolajeva said. "Although I'm not at all a fan of 'Twilight,' I do understand the appeal of it."

Nikolajeva argued that authors have a moral responsibility to include some positivity and hope in works aimed at teens.

"If young people read books where there is no hope at all, it's really damaging," she said. "We need to be aware of young people's being influenced by what they read or watch, the games they play. It all plays a very important role."
Another popular teen book series, the "Hunger Games" trilogy by Suzanne Collins, straddles the line between dark and hopeful, Nikolajeva said. Its themes – a dystopian future where teens must battle to the death on reality TV – appeal to teenagers' dark side, yet its ultimately hopeful message is probably having a good influence on young people, she said.

The conference marked the beginning of a critical dialogue about the role of literature on teen minds and behaviors, she said.

"I think the most important thing to bear in mind is that neither a sciences approach nor a humanities approach gives us the entire picture of how teens interact with literature," Coats said.

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Modern Arabic Literature Websites and Journals

Written by son of rambow on Monday, September 27, 2010

The most outstanding Arabic writer of the 20th century is Naguib Mahfouz, a prolific Egyptian novelist, playwright, and screenwriter who won the Nobel Prize for literature in 1988. Other prominent writers from Egypt - which has long been the intellectual centre of the Arab world - include Taha Hussein and Tawfiq al-Hakim.

Censorship and the lack of an educated readership have restricted literary activity in many countries. Although banned in Saudi Arabia and little known in the west, Cities of Salt by Abdelrahman Munif is considered by many to be one of the greatest modern novels. It deals with the discovery of oil in a remote oasis, and the impact of American business and corrupt Arab rulers on the lives of the poor local community.

Lebanon has produced an outstanding poet, Kahlil Gibran, whose mystical poetry is widely read. Among women writers, Nawal al-Saadawi is probably the best known.

A number of modern writers have also emerged in the Maghreb (north Africa), though many of them write in French rather than Arabic.

Following are the list of arabic literary websites and journals

Al Jadid
Magazine of Arab culture and arts

Banipal
A magazine of modern Arab literature

Palestinian literature
(Khalil Sakakini Cultural Centre)

Maghrebi Studies Group

Libyan literature and art
(in Arabic, via Ibrahim Ighneiwa)

Litteratures du Maghreb (LIMAG)

Algérie Littérature / Action (in French)


International Journal of Francophone Studies (mainly in English)

Expressions maghrébines (in French)
(Coordination Internationale des Chercheurs sur les Littératures Maghrébines). See also archive: Etudes littéraires maghrébines

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10 "Obscene" Literary Classics

Written by son of rambow on Monday, September 27, 2010

When the Supreme Court codified obscenity law in Miller v. California (1972), it established that a work could not be classified as obscene unless it could be demonstrated that "taken as a whole, (it) lacks serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value." But that ruling was hard-won; in the years leading up to Miller, countless authors and publishers were prosecuted for distributing works that are now considered literary classics. Here are a few.

1. "Ulysses" (1922) by James Joyce
When an excerpt from Ulysses was serialized in a 1920 literary magazine, members of the New York Society for the Suppression of Vice were shocked by the novel's masturbation scene and took it upon themselves to block U.S. publication of the full work. A trial court reviewed the novel in 1921, found it to be pornographic, and banned it under obscenity laws. The ruling was overturned 12 years later, allowing a U.S. edition to be published in 1934.

2. "Lady Chatterley's Lover" (1928) by D.H. Lawrence
What is now Lawrence's best-known book was just a dirty little secret during his lifetime. Privately printed in 1928 (two years before Lawrence's death), this subversive tale of adultery between a rich woman and her husband's servant went unnoticed until U.S. and UK publishers brought it to press in 1959 and 1960, respectively. Both publications inspired high-profile obscenity trials--and in both cases, the publisher won.

3. "Madame Bovary" (1857) by Gustave Flaubert
When excerpts from Flaubert's Madame Bovary were published in 1856 France, law enforcement officials were horrified at Flaubert's (relatively non-explicit) fictional memoir of a physician's adulterous wife. They immediately attempted to block full publication of the novel under France's strict obscenity codes, prompting a lawsuit. Flaubert won, the book went to press in 1857, and the literary world has never been the same since.

4. "The God of Small Things" (1996) by Arundhati Roy
The God of Small Things earned the young Indian novelist Roy millions of dollars in royalties, international fame, and the 1997 Booker Prize. It also earned her an obscenity trial. In 1997, she was summoned to India's Supreme Court to defend against a claim that the book's brief and occasional sex scenes, involving a Christian woman and a low-caste Hindu servant, corrupted public morals. She successfully fought the charges, but has yet to write her second novel.

5. "Howl and Other Poems" (1955) by Allen Ginsberg
"I saw the best minds of my generation destroyed by madness...," begins Ginsberg's poem "Howl," which reads like it could be a reasonably good (if unconventional) commencement speech or the world's worst Easter homily. A profane but fairly non-explicit metaphor involving anal penetration--tame by the standards of South Park--earned Ginsberg an obscenity trial in 1957, and transformed him from an obscure Beatnik poet into a revolutionary poet-icon.

6. "The Flowers of Evil" (1857) by Charles Baudelaire
Baudelaire didn't believe that poetry has any real didactic value, arging that its purpose is to be, not to say. But to the extent that Flowers of Evil is didactic, it communicates the very old concept of original sin: that the author is depraved, and the horrified reader even more so. The French government charged Baudelaire with "corrupting public morals" and suppressed six of his poems, but they were published nine years later to critical acclaim.

7. "Tropic of Cancer" (1934) by Henry Miller
"I have made a silent compact with myself," Miller begins, "not to change a line of what I write." Judging by the 1961 obscenity trial that followed U.S. publication of his novel, he meant it. But this semi-autobiographical work (which George Orwell called the greatest novel written in English) is more playful than lurid. Imagine what The Unbearable Lightness of Being might be like if Woody Allen wrote it, and you have the right idea.

8. "The Well of Loneliness" (1928) by Radclyffe Hall
The Well's semi-autobiographical character of Stephen Gordon is literature's first modern lesbian protagonist. That was enough to get all copies of the novel destroyed following its 1928 U.S. obscenity trial, but the novel has been rediscovered in recent decades. In addition to being a literary classic in its own right, it is a rare time capsule of frank early 20th century attitudes towards sexual orientation and sexual identity.

9. "Last Exit to Brooklyn" (1964) by Hubert Selby Jr.
This dark collection of six shockingly contemporary stream-of-consciousness short stories tells of murder, gang rape, and grinding poverty set against the backdrop of the sex trade and Brooklyn's underground gay community. Last Exit spent four years in the British court system before it was finally declared not to be obscene in a landmark 1968 ruling.

10. "Fanny Hill, or Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure" (1749) by John Cleland
Fanny Hill holds the distinction of being the longest-banned book in U.S. history. It was initially declared obscene in 1821, a ruling that was not overturned until the U.S. Supreme Court's landmark Memoirs v. Massachusetts (1966) decision. During those 145 years, the book was forbidden fruit--but in recent decades, it has attracted little interest from non-scholars.

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Among the Believers: An Islamic Journey

Written by eastern writer on Friday, September 24, 2010

a book by V.S. Naipaul

Travelling through Iran just after the revolution as well as Pakistan, Malaysia and Indonesia where he meets up with those caught up in the push for Islamist nations: Shias and Shi'ites, communists and apostates, youth organisers, mullahs and government officials. Asking them about their lives, looking at their hopes and dreams and always questioning their reasons.

It's a fascinating time: we glimpse the aftermath of the Iranian revolution, visit Pakistan in flux, in the grip of the army and struggling to be a Islamic state and then see an Indonesia caught between old and new and looking for a way forward. Obviously it's deeply topical but not only for providing historical grounding on Islamic fundamentalism but also asking questions about that fundamentalism and ones that still haven't been answered.

It's not a hatchet job, Naipaul is kind, highly intelligent, sometimes superior, honest, deeply insightful and always questioning. For those used to the uncritical simplifications of today's portrayal of Islam this a most refreshing book and because Naipul looks at the Islamic faith itself, I found I learnt much. If I have made it sound dull and worthy I apologise it's eminently readable, very human but it is serious as well as fascinating, troubling as it is enlightening and the questions it raises can be applied to all fkavours of fundamentalism.

I really cannot praise this enough but maybe if you are familiar with both the faith and the history it will not be as good. Still it's worth reading as a simple, interesting, travelogue.

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Pessimism and existentialism in V.S. Naipaul #3

Written by eastern writer on Friday, September 24, 2010

The existential sense of disgust and nausea is also brought out in Guerrillas when Roche is conversing with Mrs. Stephens about life in general and how things can go wrong. The use of nausea is utilized in the following passage. But it is not just a description of a physical discomfort or part of the local scene that is narrated; it is a more universal feeling of disgust. It is a projection of decay and non-being.

But he wasn't prepared for the contempt, the contempt of women for
women, the contempt which, in that room, from Mrs. Stephens, was
like a contempt for her own body and the body of her neighbor,
slack, swollen, worn out. The grapefruit taste in Roche's mouth
went bitter; he associated it with the smell of the chicken dung
and dust that came through the window; and the saliva thickened
nauseously on his tongue. (107)


Roche after his interview with Meredith in the studio becomes sad and overwhelmed due to the failure of the encounter. It seems he has had it with Trinidad; everything has come out wrong and nasty. He is a cuckold and a failure. But more than this there is the loneliness that he feels of the "immense world;" the sense of nothingness and disarray.

A great exhausted melancholy came to Roche: the sense of the end of
the day [or his life], a feeling of futility, of being physically
lost in an immense world. Melancholy, at the same time, for the
others, more rooted than himself: for the studio manager, the man
from the country, for the policeman with the rifle and the woman at
the desk who were both so deferential to Meredith, melancholy for
Meredith: an overwhelming exasperation, almost like contempt,
confused with a sense of the fragility of their world. [my
emphasis] (210)

A Bend in the River and In a Free State are novels with a deep Conradian pathos that reflect worlds falling apart. They are books that have an African setting and deal with alienation and fluctuating identities in the post-colonial world where tragic figures, marginalized and frustrated, grope for a sense of identity and meaning in life. There is an extreme pessimism projected by Naipaul in both these texts as to possible changes in Africa. This is also true of Naipaul's Indian texts and his Islamic ventures; it is not a personal form of criticism, but one that seems to unveil a great post-colonial conspiracy against the Third World. It is not what Empire has done to its peripheries, but what has not been done after the rampage, the pillage and the exploitation. The Third World has been ravished and left destitute by Empire: it has not been provided with support for its future development. It is this bitter consequence, which for Naipaul has no immediate answers but futility, dissolution and disintegration. (1)

The African rage that is characterized in the following passage is not something that is strictly local and African. Naipaul has used this same primitive rage in his other texts to characterize a more existential nihilism that humans by nature have within themselves. Salim tries to describe this nihilism: "The wish had only been to get rid of the old, to wipe out the memory of the intruder. It was unnerving, the depth of that African rage, the wish to destroy, regardless of the consequences" (A Bend in the River 26). This African rage, this nihilism, is something that is also fundamentally human regardless of where it takes place, whether in Africa, South Asia, South America, North America, or in the Caribbean. The following passage in A Bend in the River that characterizes this nihilism is emblematic of the twentieth century in general where ideologies and beliefs have fostered massacres and genocides in the name of justice and equality:

Now they say they have to do a lot more killing, and everybody will
have to dip their hands in the blood. They're going to kill
everybody who can read and write, everybody who ever put on a
jacket and tie, everybody who put on a jacket de boy. They're going
to kill all the masters and all the servants. When they're finished
nobody will know there was a place like this here. They're going to
kill and kill. They say it is the only way, to go back to the
beginning before it's too late. The killing will last for days.
They say it is better to kill for days than to die forever. It is
going to be terrible when the President comes. (275)

Salim begins this narrative by laying a fundamental existential assumption that is the conceptual framework of the entire novel. It is not just a simple credo or assumption, as Campbell has wanted to argue (399), but rather, it is a declaration that has universal sense, a universal credo of man's existence and his futile search for meaning and identity: "The world is what it is; men who are nothing, who allow themselves to become nothing, have no place in it" (3).

In Beyond Belief, a narrative of his Islamic ventures seventeen years later, Naipaul continues with this deep sense of pessimism towards these "converted people" and their existence. Naipaul observes in this text a state of insecurity in the various countries he visits. It develops into philosophical nihilism; the Islamic state has entered every facet of people's lives. There is no sense of escape; these "converted" people have had their history erased. Naipaul's deep pessimism is everywhere inscribed, and by the end of the text one has a panic to deal with. It is a book of many stories that lead to futility and resignation; stories that may very well have a prophetic sense of upcoming doom and destruction, like the story of the deformed abused housewife who had her nose butchered by her husband. She was unable to do anything to defend herself; it was a futile affair; "she was helpless" (254). In "Author's Foreword" (Finding the Centre), Naipaul informs us of the importance of finding order and a center in one's experience of the world, of identifying the incongruities of human existence so that one can understand and make sense of them. He writes the following of his West African trip: "the people I found, the people I was attracted to, were not unlike myself. They too were trying to find order in their world, looking for the centre; and my discovery of these people is as much part of the story" (ix). Most of the people and individuals represented in this and other texts are existential beings that will never obtain the serenity, assurance and order that they seek. They are destined to failure according to Naipaulian discourse.

The Enigma of Arrival, a massive text that includes an immersion into autobiographical realities, is also a philosophical text in which Naipaul projects existential ideas of impermanence, futility, and doom. Naipaul's panic, associated with this philosophical strand, is documented many times. Again, let me utilize the same quote that I used elsewhere in this study, but this time focusing on the philosophical idea that this strand takes on in Naipual: "To see the possibility, the certainty, of ruin, even at the moment of creation: it was my temperament. Those nerves had been given me as a child in Trinidad partly by our family circumstances: the half-ruined or broken-down houses we live in, our many moves, our general uncertainty" (52). These "nerves" and sense of panic are certainly connected to this philosophical perspective of doom and dissolution. At one point this existentialist credo is characterized plainly through Jack, the gardener, as Naipaul writes: "The bravest and most religious thing about his life was his way of dying: the way he had asserted, at the very end, the primacy not what was beyond life, but life itself" (93). It is clear that existentialist thought is not interested in what is "beyond life," but in life itself as was illustrated in Sartre's "The Wall." The Enigma of Arrival is a text that takes major concerns with autobiographical realities and philosophical implications; it is a book in which Naipaul is defining himself more fully, it is a sensitive, introspective, meditative and sincere text of himself. The following passage clearly reflects Naipaul's thoughts, a way of looking at everything from the perspective of decay:

How sad it was to lose that sense of width and space! It caused me
pain. But already I had grown to live with the idea that things
changed; already I lived with the idea of decay. (I had always
lived with this idea. It was like my curse: the idea, which I had
had even as a child in Trinidad, that I had come into a world past
its peak.) Already I lived with the idea of death, the idea,
impossible for a young person to possess, to hold in his heart,
that one's time on earth, one's life, was a short thing. These
ideas, of a world in decay, a world subject to constant change, and
of the shortness of human life, made many things bearable. (23)

The existential sadness continues in a later travel narrative, A Turn in the South, which takes Naipaul on a trip through the Southeast portion of the United States. The characters involved in this text also have a historical sense of hopelessness: the poor whites, the Blacks, the people on the bottom. This melancholic sadness, this song of the South, is a bleak foreshadowing for these groups. There is a deep sense of pathos and futility, especially as it pertains to the Southern Blacks and their plight. Though they have been liberated from slavery, they are still a rejected people and as Naipaul has noted: "among the most denuded in that country" (119). The same sadness and futility that was present in The Loss of El Dorado is also present here. This sense of historical doom and existential decay continues in A Way in the World.

In A Way in the World, Naipaul again documents his pessimism, both from a historical perspective as in The Loss of El Dorado and from a synchronic view as in The Middle Passage. There are also many autobiographical sections and passages in which philosophical pessimism is present. In broad terms A Way in the World represents a text that is tinged with an atmosphere of insecurity, panic and destitution. Naipaul's description of the inside of the Registrar-General's department with its fish glue smell gives a slight impression of a nauseating stimulus: "The volumes smelled of fish glue. This was what they were bound with; and I suppose the glue was made from a boiling down of fish bones and skin and offal. It was the colour of honey; it dried very hard, and every careless golden drip had the clarity of glass; but it never lost the smell of fish and rottenness" (23). The text includes such sections as "New Clothes: An Unwritten Story," which represent illusions and possibilities, a "what if" situation for the writer. It is a section in which futility is clothed with anonymity. The story reminds one of Camus's "The Growing Stone" (Exile and the Kingdom) in which the principal character has similar traits and existential feelings as this anonymous character in "unwritten story". "New Clothes" is another strange story, a kind of post-modernistic narrative in which the narrator is implicated in, not only the story, but in the writing of the story, looking into the mirror of a mirror. The illusion continues. The narrator narrates about this other narrator as he sinks into the red water (from the leaves), and a discourse of nothingness ensues much in the same manner as in Hemingway and Sartre's texts.

The pool is as deep as the young men say. Soon the light fades from
the water. Soon it is utterly black. Soon it is of a black so deep
that it is without colour: it is nothing, however much you
concentrate on it. In this nothing the narrator feels he has lost
touch with his body; water blocks sensation. He is just his eyes
concentrating on nothing; he is just mind alone, a perceiving of
nothing. He is quite frightened. He somehow gets in touch with his
will again and pulls himself up, to the yellowing light. (65)

Raleigh and Miranda are characterized as tragic figures, lost in swamps of desperation in the New World, becoming almost destitute at times. Total pessimism envelops their actions; they are caught between Empire and the uncivilized New World. They are futile characters in a futile environment according to Naipaul. This is also true of the real-life based characters of Lebrun, Morris, and Blair: losers of everything, and caught in the currents of the New World vortices of demise, doom and decay. Finally, one should look at Miranda and Sally's letters. These missives reflect such a sad existential and futile mood, intimate and pathetic conversations that project a kind of madness and the eventual arrival of "nothingness" in their lives (299-334). Truly, Naipaul's areas of darkness are not that much physical and material in nature, but begin in the deep recesses of the spirit of man; a sense of dread about life and what it offers. It is an existentialist mind trying to grope for sanity and order in a world that is governed by apparent chaos and death, in a world that is filled with contradictions and paradoxes.

Bibliography here

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Gothic Horror and Muslim Madness in V. S. Naipaul

Written by eastern writer on Friday, September 24, 2010

Gothic Horror and Muslim Madness in V. S. Naipaul’s Beyond Belief: ‘Orientalist’ Excursions among the Converted People

by Wendy O’Shea-Meddour
This article is written in response to the favorable critical reception that V. S. Naipaul’s writings about the Muslim world have received in mainstream western culture. Since the publication of his travel narratives, Among the Believers and Beyond Belief, Naipaul has enjoyed a reputation as an authority on the Muslim world. The critical acclaim that he has received has been accompanied by official recognition, including a knighthood and the Nobel Prize for Literature.

However, many critics beyond the periphery of mainstream western culture have voiced concerns about his hatred of Islam. In this article, I offer a revisionist reading of Naipaul’s most recent Islamic travel narrative, Beyond Belief, arguing that Islamophobia has been disturbingly misinterpreted as expertise. Focusing on three main literary themes – nineteenth-century literary conventions, the gothic genre, and neurosis – I expose this bigoted worldview and call for his status to be reconsidered.


-------
V. S. Naipaul’s writings about the Muslim world have become increasingly influential in mainstream western culture. Since the publication of his travel narratives Among the Believers and Beyond Belief, in which he offered an account of his travels in Indonesia, Iran, Pakistan and Malaysia, Naipaul has established himself as an authority on “Islam in action.” With specific reference to his “Islamic journeys,” critics have commended Naipaul for his “moral integrity,” “fearless truth-telling,” and loyalty to the “proof of evidence.”1 The favorable critical reception that Among the Believers and Beyond Belief elicited has given rise to the inclusion of Naipaul’s work in books that promise “new levels of understanding about Islam.”2 Critical acclaim has been matched by official recognition: In 1990, Naipaul received a knighthood for his services to literature and, in 2001, was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature.

However, in contrast to this impressive résumé, critics beyond the periphery of mainstream western culture have referred to him as a man “incapable of restraining his loathing for the Islamic world and its people.” 3 Concerns about Naipaul’s hatred of Islam, as voiced by Eqbal Ahmad, Amin Malak, Caryl Phillips, and even Salman Rushdie,4 give Naipaul’s prominent status in mainstream western culture a rather more sinister aspect. In this article, I shall expose how his Islamophobia has been interpreted as expertise by offering a revisionist reading of Beyond Belief. Focusing on three main literary themes in Naipaul’s most recent “Islamic excursion,” namely, nineteenth-century literary conventions, the gothic genre, and neurosis, I shall argue that his standing as an authority on the Muslim world needs to be reconsidered.

Literary Conventions and Naipaul’s Restricted Passages

Although literary critics overwhelmingly accept that there is an ambivalent relationship between travel writing and fiction,5 travel writing is still largely referred to as non-fictional literature. This label is misleading, for it detracts from the fact that travel writing is an established literary genre full of narrative conventions and fictional devices. Travel writing and fiction frequently overlap and intertwine. However, while critics celebrate Naipaul for his “moral integrity” and “commitment to truth,” it is not surprising that Beyond Belief has been predominantly read as an informative, factual text. We are repeatedly promised that Naipaul’s travel writing will “enable” western readers to gain an “insight” into the life of Muslims.

Naipaul does everything possible to reinforce this sort of reading. In the prologue to Beyond Belief, the narrative voice assures us that “THIS is a book about people. It is not a book of opinions.”6 We are guaranteed that “the truth” will be presented to us in an undistorted manner. Sensitive to the ways in which an obtrusive narrator can undermine the authority of a “non-fictional” text, Naipaul promises that the “writer will be less present, less of an inquirer”; instead, he will be “in the background, trusting to his instinct.”7 Modelling himself on a figure esteemed by nineteenth century English romantics, Naipaul claims to be a pure, natural, and instinctive artist. In this manner, he assures us that we can rely on his objectivity.

Nineteenth-century literary conventions do not only provide Naipaul with inspiration regarding the narrator’s role. During this literary period, the English novel as a genre had not yet found a narrative device that could provide the illusion that the reader could enter into the character’s mind. Modernist conventions such as the “stream of consciousness” were yet to emerge. Consequently, the “internal” drama was displaced onto an excessively responsive physical body or environment. Nineteenth-century literature twitches with hysterical characters prone to excessive blushing, hyperventilation, trembling, and faints. For example, in Wilkie Collins’ novel The Woman in White, “womanish tears,” shivering skin, and severe bouts of “nervousness” besiege the main characters. All of the characters’ doubts and concerns are played out on the skin’s surface.8

Similarly, in a novel such as Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre, we know when the central character is angry or frustrated, because at these moments of crisis, a sudden backdrop of scarlet-colored soft furnishings and violent rainstorms appear.9 This sort of narrative displacement is a technique that Naipaul employs to great effect when encountering Muslims in Beyond Belief.

Writing himself into the role of the central character, Naipaul displaces his emotions onto both his physical body and the local environment. However, the symptoms that he exhibits are not the typical shivers, faints, or sweats of the nineteenth-century hero or heroine. Rather, Naipaul’s internal anxiety and, in some cases, clear disgust manifest themselves in a very specific manner. On encountering practicing Muslims, Naipaul begins to suffer from severe breathing restrictions. He also experiences an accompanying change in air quality.

The first incident occurs when he visits Imaduddin’s office. Imaduddin, who lives in Indonesia, is referred to as an “unusual man” because he is “a man of science” and “a dedicated man of the faith.” Naipaul is uncomfortable with this “contradiction” (despite their long and intertwined history, science and Islam are, in Naipaul’s view, incompatible). It is clear that he also considers Imaduddin to be a hypocrite: He takes exception to Imaduddin’s wealth, preferring “his” Muslims to be pious and poor. Despite the kindness that Imaduddin shows to his guest, his “Muslimness” causes Naipaul to suffer from unpleasant physical reactions.

Naipaul enters the office and, loyal to nineteenth-century realism, begins to make his inventory of the room:

On one side of the laptop was a well-handled Koran; on the other side was a pile of shoddily produced paperback books, perhaps a foot high, of similar size and in electric blue covers, which had been published in Egypt and might have been a very long commentary on the Koran: no doubt like meat and drink to Imaduddin.10

Naipaul is safe while Imaduddin remains in the room. But when he answers the adhan (call to prayer) and deserts Naipaul, the very presence of what Naipaul suspects to be a set of “Islamic books” (he cannot read Arabic and is therefore forced to hazard a guess at the books’ contents) is enough to provoke serious health implications. We are informed that,
... without the man himself […] his missionary paraphernalia felt oppressive […]. It was only someone like Imaduddin who could give point and life to the electric-blue Egyptian paperbacks on the glass-topped desk.11

In his heightened state of anxiety, Naipaul transforms Imaduddin’s private reading material into “dangerous missionary paraphernalia” with awesome powers. They are the “meat and drink,” the life-blood upon which Imaduddin apparently survives. The “electric-blue” covers suggest that these books are made of hazardous, explosive materials and, being only “shoddily produced,” they are set in stark contrast to the laptop computer and glass-desk upon which they rest. Naipaul prefers not to ask Imaduddin about the content of these books, for doing so would deflate the passage’s tension.

Rather, he reassures himself with the thought that this possible “commentary on the Koran is something that only a man like Imaduddin could give point and life to.” However, mere proximity to these potentially “Muslim” books causes him to suffer from the “oppressive” atmosphere that they generate.12 This episode offers a foretaste of what is to come, and Naipaul endures far more severe reactions when he is exposed to the material presence of Islamic literature in Pakistan.

The second change in atmospheric quality occurs when Naipaul visits Mohammed Akram Ranjha at a commune run by, in Naipaul’s words, “the most important of the fundamentalist groups: Jamaat-i-Islami.” Imprisoned for kidnapping and possibly helping to murder his brother’s wife (Naipaul’s choice of Muslim “interviewees” are far from being, as he claims, “representative”), Mohammed is imprisoned and shares a cell with a “political prisoner.” This leads to his “jailhouse conversion.” Eventually, a lawyer who we are told is “crazed with religion” helps Mohammed get into law college. While practicing law, Mohammed becomes politically active on behalf of Jamaat-i-Islami.

His son Saleem, a 34-year-old senior customs officer, agrees to drive Naipaul to the commune on the edge of Lahore. This is when Naipaul realizes that he has made his first major mistake: He failed to accept Saleem’s “offer of air-conditioning.” Naipaul refused the offer because he feared that he might catch a “chill.” He comes to regret this decision because the closer he gets to the commune, the more “choked” he becomes. Significantly, Naipaul’s breathing restrictions once again coincide with the call to prayer (like Imaduddin before him, Saleem deserts the afflicted Naipaul in order to go to the mosque).13 When Saleem returns, he takes Naipaul to his study and library.

At this point in the journey, Naipaul encounters yet another set of “Islamic books”:

Half the wall facing the door carried those Islamic sets in decorated binding […]. I soon stopped looking at the books. I began to choke in the stale, enclosed air. I felt I was becoming ill.14

This room of “Islamic learning” appears to be drained of oxygen. We are told that it is “entirely sealed” (by this, Naipaul later clarifies that he meant that the window was closed). Naipaul tries to rectify this and demands that someone open the window and switch on the “air-cleaner.” Sitting on the only chair in the room, one that has been brought up for him at his specific request, he sits by the window, inhales some slightly less polluted air, and begins to recover.

But the relief that he enjoys is short-lived. Having survived the stifling atmosphere produced by the adhan, the mosque, Islamic literature, and Muslim households, Naipaul’s breathing restriction returns during the following dialogue, in which Saleem proudly introduces his young son:

Saleem said, ‘He is going to learn the whole Koran by heart.’
‘The whole Koran,’ the old man said, picking up the duet with his son.
I asked, ‘How long will that take?’
Saleem said, ‘Five or six years.’
I couldn’t stay. My breathing had become very bad. Downstairs, the servants,
thin and dark and dingy, behind the sacks with the split golden paddy.
Outside, the fumes and grit of the Multan road. Saleem’s driver drove me back to the hotel. Saleem didn’t come with me.15

Naipaul’s reaction to the tradition of learning to recite the Qur’an is so violent that he flees back to the relative safety of his hotel in Lahore without delay. The little boy is left unheard.

As one can see from these passages, Naipaul’s fear of Islamic literature, mosques, or indeed any form of Muslim worship are clearly reflected in both his environment and his physical ailments. In Beyond Belief, poor air-quality is an indicator of the Islamic faith, and Naipaul’s asthmatic responses are symptomatic of the emotions that he experiences during close encounters with Muslims. In her study of Naipaul, Fawzia Mustafa observes that he uses “physical discomfort” as “a gauge for reading the functioning, or completeness, or societal health of the place in which he finds himself.”16

This is correct, but she fails to mention that Naipaul’s physical discomfort is most acute when he is in the presence of “the believers.”

Muslims of various races, traditions, and character induce violent physical responses from this narrator of supposed “moral integrity.” His dislike of Islam is so intense that he is compelled to rush out of “interviews,” escape an “oppressive” atmosphere, reach for “air-cleaners,” and struggle to open windows when in the presence of practicing Muslims. Although Naipaul may well have a sensitive physical disposition, his commitment to literary conventions in nineteenth-century fiction helps to explain both his recurrent breathing restrictions and the faith-dependent air quality that he “discovers” in Indonesia, Pakistan, Malaysia, and Iran. [source]

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Pessimism and existentialism in V.S. Naipaul #2

Written by eastern writer on Friday, September 24, 2010

Then biting his nails one evening, he broke off a piece of a tooth.
He took the piece out of his mouth and placed it on his palm. It
was yellow and quite dead, quite unimportant; he could hardly
recognize it as part of a tooth: if it were dropped on the ground
it would never be found: a part of himself that would never grow
again. He thought he would keep it. Then he walked to the window
and threw it out. (271)


Mr. Biswas's sense of security as it seems was in the owning of a house. In his first but unsuccessful try, he had a small shack built in Green Vale, which was eventually burned down by the labourers. The narrator depicts a desperate situation in Mr. Biswas's life during his panic and nervous breakdown. The house is depicted in quite a decadent manner: "But Mr. Biswas only muttered on the bed, and the rain and wind swept through the room with unnecessary strength and forced open the door to the drawingroom, wall-less, floorless, of the house Mr. Biswas had built" (292). There is a great sense of futility and desperation in this scene. Later when Mr. Biswas' mother, Bipti, dies he goes to the wake and there are existential thoughts that go through his mind:
In The Middle Passage, Naipaul delves more fully into the existential plane of pessimism and dissolution. The Middle Passage contains, for many critics, negative observations about the Caribbean in general, and yet, as I have mentioned before, it is not a sense of disgust towards the people and situations in the Caribbean that Naipaul wants to document. It is more of a philosophical assumption on the underlying premises of life in general. All the places that he visits are described and tinged with a malaise, a general perspective about life that invites one to reminisce about existential decay and ruins, about the nothingness and futility of life. Every place that he visits invokes one or more of these feelings. One of Naipaul's most timely statements has been misunderstood often because it is interpreted as a scathing and personal comment of disgust about his native region. But Naipaul's discourse should be analyzed, not in terms of binaries, but by taking into account sociological and historical realities. Let us look at the quote: "For nothing was created in the British West Indies, no civilization as in Spanish America, no great revolution as in Haiti or the American colonies. There were only plantations, prosperity, decline, neglect: the size of the islands called for nothing else" (27).

If analyzed from the philosophical perspective, one would understand better Naipaul's existentialist discourse: the use of the word "nothing" is essential here and will lead us to a wider perspective of this passage and its meaning. Naipaul is not invoking a personal criticism, but a philosophical one. It is well known that the region was constructed for exploitation, plunder, rape and slavery; it was a giant sweatshop where people, materials and processes were placed in a giant cauldron from which a Caribbean degraded stew came forth. Thus, Naipaul's philosophical comment is timely and well taken. The Middle Passage is one of Naipaul's finest texts because, among other things, the reader is introduced to the complexities of Naipaul's philosophical schemes.

One critic, Sybille Bedford, has interestingly characterized this philosophical sense in The Middle Passage: "In form, the book is the account of what must have been on the whole a rather depressing Caribbean journey" [my emphasis] (1). No doubt, this "depressing" sense is one of the effects of this existential angst. At the end of his excursion to Surinam when he visits Coronie, Naipaul writes about his experience and utilizes concepts such as dereliction, desolation, and abandonment, which are terms that clearly describe and define his existential thinking:

A derelict man in a derelict land ... lost in a landscape which had
never ceased to be unreal because the scene of an enforced and
always temporary residence: the slaves kidnapped from one continent
and abandoned on the unprofitable plantations of another, from
which there could never more be escape. I was glad to leave
Coronie, for, more than lazy Negroes, it held the full desolation
that came to those who made the middle passage. (Middle Passage
190)

The Middle Passage thus represents Naipaul's introduction to the philosophical existentialist discourse, a way of writing that will follow him in his writing career: the search for self--tinged with the sense of doom, demise and dereliction. The Middle Passage is the beginning incursion into existential pessimism and nothingness, a preoccupation with existence and individuality, and the search for order and sanity in this world. Naipaul's Mr. Stone and the Knight's Companion is a small exquisite text that clearly projects a philosophical view, a perspective that reminds one of T.S. Eliot's Prufrock with its emphasis on decadence, demise, and dissolution.

In An Area of Darkness, Naipaul's second travel narrative, there are continued descriptions and discussions of ruins; but this time, on the ruins of India. In this narrative India is viewed as a country littered with ruins and decadence in which destruction, annihilation, despair, and above all, dereliction, are everywhere to be felt. According to his thoughts, India is a land caught up in futility and destined to nothingness. Naipaul's philosophical attitude tinges everything that he sees; what he sees is an India that depresses his spirit.

He was oppressed by a sense of loss: not of present loss, but of
something missed in the past. He would have liked to be alone, to
commune with this feeling. But time was short, and always there was
the sight of Shama and the children, alien growths, alien
affections, which fed on him and called him away from that part of
him which yet remained purely himself, that part which had for long
been submerged and was now to disappear. (480)

There is an impending sense of doom and dissolution in this passage. Mr. Biswas's descent into maelstrom was made during the critical days at Green Vale where he was exposed to fear and panic of the most excruciating kind: "Fear seized him and hurt like a pain" (268). It was similar to the decay, dissolution, and impending destruction contained in both of Edgar Alan Poe's stories, "The Fall of the House of Usher" and "The Facts in the Case of M. Valdemar."

All creation in India hints at the imminence of interruption and
destruction. Building is like an elemental urge, like the act of
sex among the starved. It is building for the sake of building,
creation for the sake of creation; and each creation is separate, a
beginning and an end in itself.... but at Mahabalipuram near
Madras, on the waste sand of the sea shore, stands the abandoned
Shore Temple, its carvings worn smooth after twelve centuries of
rain and salt and wind.... In India these endless mosques and
rhetorical mausolea, these great palaces speak only of a personal
plunder and a country with an infinite capacity for being
plundered. (216-17)

In the passage above one can but notice the pessimistic sense that envelops his observations. It is a gloomy and dark fatalistic vision of things: "India was part of the night: a dead world, a long journey" (279). In the first pages of this narrative Naipaul gives us a clue of what lay ahead. It was a slow long journey into this Naipaulian area of darkness:

It had been a slow journey, its impressions varied and superficial.
But it had been a preparation for the East. After the bazaar of
Cairo the bazaar of Karachi was no surprise; and bakshish was the
same in both languages.... From Athens to Bombay another idea of
man had defined itself by degrees, a new type of authority and
subservience. The physique of Europe had melted away first into
that of Africa and then, through Semitic Arabia, into Aryan Asia.
Men had been diminished and deformed; they begged and whined.
Hysteria had been my reaction, and a brutality dictated by a new
awareness of myself as a whole human being and a determination,
touched with fear, to remain what I was. (15-16)

In his last Indian travel narrative, India: A Million Mutinies Now, written twenty-six years later, Naipaul continues with this philosophical melancholy. In the first passage of "Breaking Out" there is this sense of futility and desperation. Naipaul refers to this experience in Goa as "the fracture in reality" (140). Naipaul also reminisces through his lens of pessimism of how he entered Calcutta in 1962:

y own days in Calcutta had been hard. When I had first come to
Calcutta in 1962, I had, after the early days of strain, settled
into the big-city life of the place; had had the feeling of being
in a true metropolis, with the social and cultural stimulation of
such a place. Something of that life was still there. But I was
overpowered this time by my own wretchedness, the taste of the
water, corrupting both coffee and tea as it corrupted food, by the
brown smoke of cars and buses, by the dug-up roads and broken
footpaths, by the dirt, by the crowds. (346-47)

Twenty-six years had elapsed and still, according to Naipaul, India was in a wretched and terrible condition.

The Mimic Men, though politically inclined, is nevertheless an extraordinary philosophical novel about man's existence and fate. But its fundamental framework is pessimistic and existentialist. As Nazareth has noted: "[It] is thus unremittingly pessimistic. Hardly anybody reveals any ideals, any values beyond grabbing what one can for oneself" ("The Mimic Men as a Study" 143). It is not just localized pessimism that is negotiated in this text, but rather, a deeper, more generalized, philosophic pessimism. The text continues to explore, as in The Middle Passage, these areas of philosophic darkness. John Hearne, another Caribbean writer, has written a well-crafted essay on Naipaul's The Mimic Men in which he underscores the most significant aspect of the narrative, i.e., its existential pessimism: "[It] is a good book with a despair so isolate, with a privacy so armoured against any intrusion of society, that we can do no more than concede the unremitting integrity of its pessimism" (31). The narrator and protagonist, Ralph Singh, reiterates: "nothing was secure" (121).

There is an existential sadness behind the text, The Loss of El Dorado, but from a historical perspective. In The Loss of El Dorado Naipaul gives us the impression that Trinidad has had a history of desolation and corruption. It is an island where things were never achieved, a place where things never settled down for the better. There was always instability and a sense of decay. Anarchy and nihilism seemed to be the common words to express everything that happened. The Loss of El Dorado is a history, but it is a pessimistic history of decadence and degradation. This seems to be the basic underlying assumption of the text. As in many of his other texts, The Loss of El Dorado contains irony threaded together with this philosophical strand of pessimism. It might seem that irony is just one other way, besides caricature, that Naipaul can utilize to deal with the existential stress of nothingness, a way by which this destitution and doom, this existential decay can be dealt with rhetorically.

Corroborating my assumptions, Doerksen has noted the following about In a Free State: "it becomes clearly evident that it belongs in the genre of twentieth-century existentialist writings" (105). Kazin characterizes its theme as "the tenuousness of man's hold on the earth" (3). In a Free State consists of three short narratives, each independent from the other but thematically linked, and two outer flaps, a prologue and an epilogue that seems to bind them together. But all five pieces are intimately connected to the existential angst of the paradox of freedom and being. The constant references to nausea and nothingness have already been discussed in relation to this text. But now we are introduced to the freedom of an existential being and all the contradictions that this involves in Santosh, in Dayo's brother, in Bobby and Linda, and even in the narrator himself and the tramp. All these characters are experimenting with freedom and its paradoxes. According to Boxhill, "Naipaul ends by suggesting that in this world no time has ever been pure and consequently, absolute freedom can never exist. Purity and freedom are fabrications, illusions, causes for yearning, things for the tomb" (91).

The mad narrator in "Tell Me Who to Kill" groans with great existential pain: "Let the rat come out. The lie is over. I am like a man who is giving up. I come with nothing. I have nothing, I will leave with nothing" [my emphasis] (96). Santosh in "One Out of Many" tells us: "All that my freedom has brought me is the knowledge that I have a face and have a body, that I must feed this body and clothe this body for a certain number of years. Then it will be over" (57-58). For Dayo's brother and Santosh there is no purpose in life but the final dissolution and demise. In the story, "In a Free State," Bobby and Linda are caught up in a sense of dread, alienation, and horror: a sense of insecurity permeates this longer narrative; the same panic and fear that are present in A Bend in the River. The Conradian nature of A Bend in the River suggests as Walder has noted, "an inevitable cycle of corruption, arising out of the darkness within humanity" (108). Even though this text, like his other texts, deals mostly with the post-colonial condition of man, Naipaul's intent is to display more fully the universal dilemma of man and his existential condition. And he underscores this with a sense of dread in which the conclusion tends to be less of a happy ending and more of an ultimate decay and dissolution of man.

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Pessimism and existentialism in V.S. Naipaul

Written by eastern writer on Friday, September 24, 2010

Journal of Caribbean Literatures, Spring, 2008 by Serafin Roldan-Santiago

Naipaul, represent structures that deal directly with theme and ideas. They enrich the narratives with subtle meanings, thoughts and semantic direction. The autobiographical strand functions as a marker of personal identity since Naipaul has been in quest of "self" since the beginning. In the same manner, the philosophic strand has been essential in the development of a Naipaulian discourse. The philosophic strand is associated closely with the existential ideas of nothingness and dissolution, which in turn are closely connected to a state of pessimism and nihilism. This aura or existential sense is thus the idea or driving force that envelops many of his narratives. This is also true of Naipaulian irony. The philosophic notion of nothingness and dissolution has permeated most of Naipaul's writings beginning with his Trinidadian novels, especially The Middle Passage. This view has also developed further in some of Naipaul's middle works such as Mr. Stone and the Knight's Companion, The Mimic Men, and In a Free State, and in his later works such as A Bend in the River and The Enigma of Arrival. I prefer to call this a philosophic strand because the underlying currents and ideas can be classified as a variation of existentialist thought, perhaps post-1950s, that is, the ongoing existentialist thought to the present, especially as it pertains to post-coloniality.

Naipaul's use of this strand entails a deep pathos about life that many times ends in panic. Again, the great Naipaulian panic is brought forth. There is the mood and idea of decay and all that it can gather: dissolution, futility, corruption, and demise. It is a vision of the futility of life, especially in the post-colonial world. Lost colonials roaming across the post-colonial landscape, searching for a sense of identity, lost in a world that marginalizes them; their final destiny being desolation and dereliction. This Naipaulian philosophic strand projects the world as something that is constantly eroding and melting away. It constructs a deep pessimism about the world and its inhabitants who are viewed as totally absorbed in futility. Man is striving to understand his existence, trying to grasp it and find its rationale, but is failing at it. It is as Doerksen has written when describing the search for meaning in life as, "the futility of the search for the meaning of existence in both the past and the future" (108). It is important to point out that not only is this sense of futility and dissolution present in Naipaul's fiction, but also embeds his travel literature and historical texts. Specifically, The Loss of El Dorado is certainly an existentialist history of the Caribbean where characters, plots and events are headed towards colonial dissolution and decay. It is not Naipaul's bad intentions and meanness; it is the existential pessimism and nothingness, this driving, psychic force that permeates his writings.

In Naipaul's writings there are images and terms utilized by early existentialist writers such as Jean Paul Sartre, Albert Camus, and Ernest Hemingway. Naipaul uses these terms, concepts, and images, the most important being the images or concepts of, "nausea," "nothing(ness)," and "panic." All three form fundamental philosophical constructs in existential thought. Naipaul has articulated these in his own particular way. In Sartre's Nausea, the protagonist Roquentin ponders the following about his existence:

I glance around the room and a violent disgust floods me ... With
difficulty I chew a piece of bread which I can't make up my mind to
swallow. People. You must love people. Men are admirable. I want to
vomit--and suddenly, there it is: the Nausea. So this is Nausea:
this blinding evidence? I have scratched my head over it! I've
written about it. Now I know: I exist--the world exists--and I know
that the world exists. That's all. It makes no difference to me.
It's strange that everything makes so little difference to me: it
frightens me ... (122-123)


This quintessential passage is echoed by Santosh in Naipaul's "One Out of Many" from In a Free State. The character, Santosh, is a post-colonial who has similar problems of existence. He declares:


I was once part of the flow, never thinking of myself as a
presence. Then I looked in the mirror and decided to be free. All
that my freedom has brought me is the knowledge that I have a face
and have a body, that I must feed this body and clothe this body
for a certain number of years. Then it will be over. (57-58)


He has gained what Kumar calls "the freedom of an existential being," with all of the uncomfortable feelings and ideas that this may entail. But all three narratives in In a Free State do not "solicit sympathy for a select few," as Boxhill has noted, "it concerns itself with all mankind, even the insane and the perverted; it does not try to pinpoint the oppressors of mankind. The enemy is not simply slavery or colonialism; it is life itself, mankind itself" (81). It is the existential condition of humanity, and for Naipaul, it is not a bed of roses.

It is the existential angst in Santosh and Roquentin; the futility and the nothingness that gathers both of them into primordial existence. These disturbed sensations of the existential permeate many of Naipaul's writings. Sartre's "The Wall" is a story about political prisoners waiting for their execution at the time of the Spanish Civil War and the Franco regime. One of the characters, Tom, tells Pablo Ibbieta of the impending death that awaits them, something that will catch them off guard: "I've already stayed up a whole night waiting for something. But this isn't the same: this [death, mortality] will creep up behind us, Pablo, and we won't be able to prepare for it" (8). There is the sense of an ill feeling, a disturbing sensation, a nausea of the spirit, in these characters. Again, in Sartre's "Intimacy," the female protagonist, Lulu, is a disturbing character that provokes nausea in others. One is reminded of the many female characters in Naipaul that are presented in an unsavory manner such as Sandra in The Mimic Men, Linda in In a Free State, Jane in Guerrillas, Yvette in A Bend in the River, and finally, Willie's females in Half a Life and Magic Seeds. These women are projected as nauseating figures, as characters that invoke nausea and a general malaise. The image of nausea is, undoubtedly, fundamental in Naipaul's writings.

Camus's stories, "The Guest" and "The Growing Stone" forming part of the text, Exile and the Kingdom, have similar philosophic underpinnings. Both stories deal with the philosophic angst of making decisions and choices, and how these can be interpreted as either betrayal or loyalty. Only one study need be examined to make the point. In Camus's "The Growing Stone," the image of nausea is displayed, as in "The Guest." This story is set in the Brazilian jungle and the protagonist, D'Arrast, is a kind of consultant who is visiting these lonely outposts. He is also a character of exile. The poverty and ill conditions of the surroundings provoke in him a malaise: "D'Arrast breathed in the smell of smoke and poverty that rose from the ground and choked him" (177). During his visit he encounters a religious dance in a village in which the participants become possessed with spirits. D'Arrast is upset at this and other primitive rituals. It is his existential reality that conflicts with the natives'. After participating involuntarily in the dance D'Arrast is shaken from his foundation: "The heat, the dust, the smoke of the cigars, the smell of bodies now made the air almost unbreathable. He looked for the cook, who had disappeared. D'Arrast let himself slide down along the wall and squatted, holding back his nausea" (195). Finally, the narrator informs us of D'Arrast's loathing over this "whole continent," and how it provokes nausea and a sense of nothingness: "The whole continent was emerging from the night, and loathing overcame D'Arrast. It seemed to him that he would have liked to spew forth this whole country, the melancholy of its vast expanses, the glaucous light of its forests, and the nocturnal lapping of its big deserted rivers" (198). One is reminded of Santosh and Singh, and even of Salim in their situations and settings: the uneasiness, the plight, the futility of existence. These characters all reflect a kind of mental and spiritual, even philosophical, desolation and dereliction. It is one of Naipaul's main concerns in his narratives.

The philosophic term and concept of "nothing" and "nothingness" is also of importance in existential thought, especially in Naipaul's particular strain. It is a term that is constantly repeated in many existentialist writings. In one of Hemingway's best read stories, "A Clean, Well-Lighted Place," the old waiter, who is a kind of alter-ego of the celebrated "old man," offers the reader a soliloquy of exceptional existentialist nothingness:

What did he fear? It was not fear or dread. It was a nothing that
he knew too well. It was all a nothing and a man was nothing too.
It was only that and light was all it needed and a certain
cleanness and order. Some lived in it and never felt it but he knew
it all was nada y pues nada y nada y pues nada. Our nada who art in
nada, nada be thy name thy kingdom nada thy will be nada in nada as
it is in nada. Give us this nada our daily nada and nada us our
nada as we nada our nadas and nada us not into nada but deliver us
from nada; pues nada. Hail nothing full of nothing, nothing is with
thee. He smiled and stood before a bar with a shining steam
pressure coffee machine. (382-83)

It is almost another Roquentin meditation. The repetitious dirge towards nothingness and dissolution provokes a malaise and nauseating sense in the reader. It is a dictum that forces an individual into either making a decision of social or political commitment, or of dissolution into nothingness. One has to choose; it is one's responsibility to do so in this world. Ralph Singh in The Mimic Men is not merely informing the reader of a bad night, or even of his encounter with the fat prostitute, but rather, he is communicating his disgust toward his present condition: "In the hotel that night I was awakened by a sensation of sickness. As soon as I was in the bathroom I was sick: all the undigested food and drink of the previous day. My stomach felt strained; I was in some distress" (237). The image of nausea is invoked in this passage, but interestingly enough, this malaise has been with the protagonist since his exile, this sense of fear and dread about his existence. Santosh in "One Out of Many" also feels nausea while on the plane, but it is not just physiological nausea as the passage attests, it is also the "journey," as he states, "[T]he journey became miserable for me.... I had a shock when I saw my face in the mirror. In the fluorescent light it was the colour of a corpse" (25). The "journey" may be that of life and existence, and the "colour of a corpse" may well be the ultimatum of existence: non-existence and mortality. Thus, one can assuredly see that the tenets of existential thought are embedded in both these narratives. Dayo's brother, the narrator in "Tell Me Who to Kill", is an estranged fellow, a tragic product of things gone wrong. He declares with great pain: "The funny taste is in my mouth, my old nausea, and I feel I would vomit if I swallow" (100). Again, this is not merely a sample of a specific incident in the narrative but of the general feeling that sprinkles this text, a deep pessimism that envelops the whole discourse, an emptiness, a nothingness. Finally, in Naipaul's A Bend in the River the term, "nothing" is used many times. It is not just the mere word which is important, but its associative and connotative function. The narrator's first line reads: "The world is what it is; men who are nothing, who allow themselves to become nothing, have no place in it" (3). A casual reading of this first line would be useless; a close reading would bring out the hidden meanings and associations. The sentence is again one of the tenets of existential thought: one's existence is of value when one becomes involved and committed to society and the world. Individuals who are not involved are useless and become non-entities. They have become nothing of worth; they have allowed "themselves to become nothing."

ne final aspect of this existential angst in Naipaul that I would like to document and connect to this philosophical strand is the ever present "panic" that Naipaul has felt since his youth. He has referred to it as his "nerves," while at other times critics have called it "anxiety attacks." This "panic" has been documented in Naipaul's fiction and non-fiction. The panic appears in his early Trinidadian novels, which includes the black cloud incident in The Mystic Masseur and Biswas's panic while in Green Vale in A House for Mr. Biswas. The last being more than just a mere "panic". It is the fear of becoming derelict or homeless, a fear that has been very close to Naipaul. It is the fight of an individual who does not want to end up in anonymity, who is fighting for an identity, and who many times ends up, as Naipaul terms it, a bogus. It is the philosophical theme of existential destitution in the contemporary post-colonial world. The "panic" continues in both his middle and later works; it is an ever-present feeling of insecurity; the possibility of falling into a black hole of non-entity. Biswas in Green Vale felt like this: "He put his feet down and sat still, staring at the lamp, seeing nothing. The darkness filled his head ... He surrendered to the darkness" (267).

Naipaul's first short, lighthearted and humorous narrative, Miguel Street, contains a light pessimism that would later develop into a devastating and utter darkness. There is a fatalism and futility in Elias trying to pass the sanitary inspector's examination; in fact, he never did. Elias ironically enough landed as a cart driver collecting garbage. In the last section of Miguel Street, "How I Left Miguel Street," the narrator communicates a sadness in his short bitter remark, a sadness that will eventually turn into a sense of doom and futility in Naipaul's later texts. The narrator comments: "I left them all and walked briskly towards the aeroplane, not looking back, looking only at my shadow before me, a dancing dwarf on the tarmac" (172). It was a foreboding of things to come. The references to the "black cloud" in The Mystic Masseur and its repeated use in A House for Mr. Biswas is connected to the existential panic in these characters: "not the passing shock of momentary fear, but fear as a permanent state" (Mystic Masseur 123).

It is in A House for Mr. Biswas where this strand can be first identified. In the narrative Mr. Biswas was enveloped almost always in an atmosphere of insecurity. He had a constant fear of destitution and dereliction: "a dot on the map of the world," as he once remarked (237). This fear of becoming destitute is also part of Naipaul's autobiographical parcel: there was this "fear" always around him as a man and writer: the vision of existential nothingness, decay, and abandonment. For Naipaul, it is no joke; it is deadly serious. The following passage must be quoted in full because it exemplifies the existential consciousness of mortality felt by Mr. Biswas. It was when a piece of tooth broke off from Mr. Biswas' mouth. The existential dread is quite pronounced. The passage reminds one of Sartre's Roquentin and Santosh from "One Out of Many" in which both characters were conscious of parts of their bodies, and treated them as dislocated members of the whole. The narrator declares of Mr. Biswas:

Pessimism and existentialism in V.S. Naipaul Part 2

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