Summary: | Gao Xingjian is a Chinese Nobel Laureate in Literature best known for his
renowned novel Soul Mountain that traces the five month journey of the protagonist
from the source of the Yangtze River till it meets the China Sea. The unnamed
narrator makes a trip to the remote places of the eastern China bordering Tibet and
highlights the ravages caused by Cultural Revolution under the leadership of Mao
Zedong. In the name of development and in their bid to embrace modernity the
Red Guards completely destroyed the people’s sense of rootedness to their land
and place and imposed a kind of forced amnesia that compelled them to adopt a
life that is artificial and alien to these people. Gao Xingjian in his novel explores
the dreams and oral folk narratives of the minority community and also explores the various myths, beliefs, legends and rituals that is integral to their culture. The
paper seeks to examine the role of myths, folklore and oral tradition in preserving
the characteristic form of civilization and its customs, legends, traditional
knowledge, beliefs, superstition and cultures in oral tradition which are transmitted
from generation to generation. It further makes an attempt to represent the traces
of the buried past under the critical political situation. Soul Mountain makes a
journey into the past of the nation and then used it as a source of imparting and
preserving the ecological heritage of these indigenous people. The methodological
tools of ecocriticism like indigenous ecocriticism, place, landscape, deep ecology,
biocenticism have been applied for the analysis of the text.
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