<b>Diaspora conditions in <em>The Match</em></b> - DOI: 10.4025/actascilangcult.v31i1.5277

Romesh Gunesekera, a Sri Lankan born British writer, “a connoisseur of displacement” who has been “brought up on three separate islands – Sri Lanka, the Philippines and England” (IYER, 1995, p. 30) and a London resident since 1972, belongs to those “‘South Asian’ (diasporic) writers” (NASTA, 2000, p...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Susanne Pichler
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidade Estadual de Maringá 2009-03-01
Series:Acta Scientiarum: Language and Culture
Online Access:https://periodicos.uem.br/ojs/index.php/ActaSciLangCult/article/view/5277
Description
Summary:Romesh Gunesekera, a Sri Lankan born British writer, “a connoisseur of displacement” who has been “brought up on three separate islands – Sri Lanka, the Philippines and England” (IYER, 1995, p. 30) and a London resident since 1972, belongs to those “‘South Asian’ (diasporic) writers” (NASTA, 2000, p. 96), who seeks to write (concepts of) ‘home’ from a series of multiple locations (NASTA, 2002, p. 216). In all of his texts, Gunesekera’s primary concern is not to (re)create a particular place, or a real landscape, it is rather how to write the diasporic stories of individual lives based on personal and highly private fragments of memories. The Match (GUNESEKERA, 2006), Gunesekera’s latest novel, takes up some of the themes already elaborated upon in his prize-winning short story collection Monkfish Moon (GUNESEKERA, 1992), or in the Booker Prize Finalist (1995), Reef (GUNESEKERA, 1994), a short novel: Sri Lankans (in)voluntarily leaving their ‘home’, faced with the intricacies of setting up ‘home’ way from ‘home’, frequently idealizing the place they have left behind, nostalgically yearning to re-turn, re-access and re-inhabit their homeland, only to realize – painfully, at times –, that this place cannot be returned to, and if it can, then only in their imagination. Longing to belong – geographically, mentally, spiritually -, through movement and attachment, Gunesekera’s characters are ‘on the move’, on a quest for the missing link in life, and, as the title of The Match intimates, they are on a quest for a “match” in life, i.e. on a quest for happiness, and purpose.
ISSN:1983-4675
1983-4683