Exile Literature and the Diasporic Indian Writer

The essay takes a holistic view of the word “exile” to encompass a range of displaced existence. It illustrates through John Simpson’s The Oxford Book of Exile the various forms of exiles. The essay then goes on to show that diasporic Indian writing is in some sense also a part of exile literature....

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Amit Shankar Saha
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AesthetixMS: Aesthetics Media Services 2009-10-01
Series:Rupkatha Journal on Interdisciplinary Studies in Humanities
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.rupkatha.com/0102exileliteratureanddiasporicindianwriter.pdf
Description
Summary:The essay takes a holistic view of the word “exile” to encompass a range of displaced existence. It illustrates through John Simpson’s The Oxford Book of Exile the various forms of exiles. The essay then goes on to show that diasporic Indian writing is in some sense also a part of exile literature. By exemplifying writers both from the old Indian diaspora of indentured labourers and the modern Indian diaspora of IT technocrats, it shows that despite peculiarities there is an inherent exilic state in all dislocated lives whether it be voluntary or involuntary migration. More importantly, a broad survey of the contributions of the second generation of the modern Indian diaspora in the field of Indian writing in English depict certain shift in concerns in comparison to the previous generation and thereby it widens the field of exile literature.
ISSN:0975-2935