Psychic Unhomings, Amnesia, and the Risk of Decosmopolitanization in Damon Galgut’s <i>The Impostor</i> (2008)

The apartheid regime has left behind a range of chronic and structural disturbances of home/lands in contemporary South Africa. This article examines the representation of housing in Damon Galgut’s <i>The Impostor</i>. In this post-apartheid novel, houses feature prominently; they are no...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Michela Borzaga
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-09-01
Series:Humanities
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0787/9/3/105
Description
Summary:The apartheid regime has left behind a range of chronic and structural disturbances of home/lands in contemporary South Africa. This article examines the representation of housing in Damon Galgut’s <i>The Impostor</i>. In this post-apartheid novel, houses feature prominently; they are not only the axle around which the plot revolves, but characters in their own right. Houses are depicted as relational and dynamic sites, invested with traumatic repressed material. By drawing on critical house studies, psychoanalysis, memory, and postcolonial studies, it will be shown that there is a strong intersection that needs to be unpacked between inhabited spaces, the mnemonic economy of the self, its displacements and unexpected flights, and the larger socio-economic and political sphere. This article argues that houses in Galgut’s novel emerge as psychological and affective contents, as symptoms of historical amnesia and displaced whiteness; characters’ psychic disturbances find fertile terrain in a country which, while parading itself as “new” and “open”, risks regressing towards new forms of “decosmopolitanization” (Appadurai).
ISSN:2076-0787