Bio-surveillance and The Immobilizing Journey in The Inheritance of Loss

This article focuses on the notion of bio-surveillance in Kiran Desai’s The Inheritance of Loss (2006) from the perspectives of Ajana and Foucault. It tries to discuss why postcolonial journeying, despite its reputation for upsetting the old colonial paradigms of cultural demarcations, has ended up...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Zahra Taheri
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Alzahra University 2023-09-01
Series:Journal of Language Horizons
Subjects:
Online Access:https://lghor.alzahra.ac.ir/article_7095_5fb62338105fe0436597122536c7080d.pdf
_version_ 1797676845531922432
author Zahra Taheri
author_facet Zahra Taheri
author_sort Zahra Taheri
collection DOAJ
description This article focuses on the notion of bio-surveillance in Kiran Desai’s The Inheritance of Loss (2006) from the perspectives of Ajana and Foucault. It tries to discuss why postcolonial journeying, despite its reputation for upsetting the old colonial paradigms of cultural demarcations, has ended up in the invisible biocitizenship of diasporic figures. To this end, the article elaborates on the biometric measures, ranging from the classic model of Anthropometry to the most advanced biometric technologies, and their deployment at the service of securitization in the center of empire. It is argued that these measures, by keeping the colonial paradigm of otherization intact, have divided society into friends / enemies and, later, reduced the latter into the bare life of invisible biocitizenship. Hence, it can be remarked that postcolonial journeying, despite its apparent dissolution of meta-narratives of identity or cultural geography, underpins the ‘us-versus-them’ binary and proves immobilizing. This means that the open-gate policy cannot wipe out the racist blemish from the West’s reputation since the racism which roots in bodily features (including skin) conducts identity, citizenship, and immigration policies. Hence, racial minorities are always the other, even though their bodies are subject to change.
first_indexed 2024-03-11T22:36:20Z
format Article
id doaj.art-cc60732b7cf14f6081943b4c1e2d0f5c
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2588-350X
2588-5634
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-11T22:36:20Z
publishDate 2023-09-01
publisher Alzahra University
record_format Article
series Journal of Language Horizons
spelling doaj.art-cc60732b7cf14f6081943b4c1e2d0f5c2023-09-22T14:26:21ZengAlzahra UniversityJournal of Language Horizons2588-350X2588-56342023-09-0172335410.22051/lghor.2022.33233.15547095Bio-surveillance and The Immobilizing Journey in The Inheritance of LossZahra Taheri0Assistant Professor of English Literature, University of Kashan, IranThis article focuses on the notion of bio-surveillance in Kiran Desai’s The Inheritance of Loss (2006) from the perspectives of Ajana and Foucault. It tries to discuss why postcolonial journeying, despite its reputation for upsetting the old colonial paradigms of cultural demarcations, has ended up in the invisible biocitizenship of diasporic figures. To this end, the article elaborates on the biometric measures, ranging from the classic model of Anthropometry to the most advanced biometric technologies, and their deployment at the service of securitization in the center of empire. It is argued that these measures, by keeping the colonial paradigm of otherization intact, have divided society into friends / enemies and, later, reduced the latter into the bare life of invisible biocitizenship. Hence, it can be remarked that postcolonial journeying, despite its apparent dissolution of meta-narratives of identity or cultural geography, underpins the ‘us-versus-them’ binary and proves immobilizing. This means that the open-gate policy cannot wipe out the racist blemish from the West’s reputation since the racism which roots in bodily features (including skin) conducts identity, citizenship, and immigration policies. Hence, racial minorities are always the other, even though their bodies are subject to change.https://lghor.alzahra.ac.ir/article_7095_5fb62338105fe0436597122536c7080d.pdfbiopowerpost-colonial journeyingbiometric measureskiran desaibiocitizenship
spellingShingle Zahra Taheri
Bio-surveillance and The Immobilizing Journey in The Inheritance of Loss
Journal of Language Horizons
biopower
post-colonial journeying
biometric measures
kiran desai
biocitizenship
title Bio-surveillance and The Immobilizing Journey in The Inheritance of Loss
title_full Bio-surveillance and The Immobilizing Journey in The Inheritance of Loss
title_fullStr Bio-surveillance and The Immobilizing Journey in The Inheritance of Loss
title_full_unstemmed Bio-surveillance and The Immobilizing Journey in The Inheritance of Loss
title_short Bio-surveillance and The Immobilizing Journey in The Inheritance of Loss
title_sort bio surveillance and the immobilizing journey in the inheritance of loss
topic biopower
post-colonial journeying
biometric measures
kiran desai
biocitizenship
url https://lghor.alzahra.ac.ir/article_7095_5fb62338105fe0436597122536c7080d.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT zahrataheri biosurveillanceandtheimmobilizingjourneyintheinheritanceofloss