Porous borders: the amorphous nature of magical realist fiction in Asia and Australasia

<p>This thesis aims to broaden the scope of magical realism by examining contemporary fiction in Asia and Australasia, regions which have been largely neglected in critical discussion of the narrative mode. My research seeks to modify and expand our collective conception of magical realism thr...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Holgate, B
Other Authors: Mukherjee, A
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
_version_ 1826316240105242624
author Holgate, B
author2 Mukherjee, A
author_facet Mukherjee, A
Holgate, B
author_sort Holgate, B
collection OXFORD
description <p>This thesis aims to broaden the scope of magical realism by examining contemporary fiction in Asia and Australasia, regions which have been largely neglected in critical discussion of the narrative mode. My research seeks to modify and expand our collective conception of magical realism through key texts that challenge not only how we read the narrative mode, but also our expectations of it. My analysis involves a dual intervention in the fields of postcolonial studies and world literature. I supplement existing scholarship of magical realism with new paradigms of critical thought, such as epistemology, mythopoeia, ecocriticism, intertextuality and discourse on human rights. Each of the key authors – Indigenous Australian Alexis Wright, New Zealand Maoris Keri Hulme and Witi Ihimaera, Indian-born cosmopolitans Amitav Ghosh and Salman Rushdie, and Chinese Nobel laureate Mo Yan – subjects the narrative mode to differing intellectual, socio-cultural and historical frameworks, and in the process reinvents magical realism to serve their own artistic purposes. The authors' key texts demonstrate the need to recalibrate theory on magical realism in contexts such as Alexis Wright's depiction of ongoing colonisation of Australia's first inhabitants in a supposedly postcolonial country, and Mo Yan's critique of post-communist China. I argue that magical realism has porous borders, not only geographically and culturally, but also in the sense that the narrative mode frequently spills over into other, different generic kinds such that the distinctions between them are often blurred. In addition, magical realism’s constant state of transformation makes it particularly difficult to define. Therefore, I propose a minimalist definition of the narrative mode and a flexible approach. However, underlying cultural elements and individual artistic expression in a text may sometimes limit magical realism’s utility as a tool for literary analysis. Finally, I explore the notion of a genealogy of magical realism based on polygenesis, emerging in different cultures at different times.</p>
first_indexed 2024-03-06T20:36:05Z
format Thesis
id oxford-uuid:32abdfeb-baa7-40ee-b721-89b66bc74043
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-09T03:41:17Z
publishDate 2016
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:32abdfeb-baa7-40ee-b721-89b66bc740432024-12-07T12:18:46ZPorous borders: the amorphous nature of magical realist fiction in Asia and AustralasiaThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:32abdfeb-baa7-40ee-b721-89b66bc74043postcolonialismgenre theorymagical realismworld literatureEnglishORA Deposit2016Holgate, BMukherjee, A<p>This thesis aims to broaden the scope of magical realism by examining contemporary fiction in Asia and Australasia, regions which have been largely neglected in critical discussion of the narrative mode. My research seeks to modify and expand our collective conception of magical realism through key texts that challenge not only how we read the narrative mode, but also our expectations of it. My analysis involves a dual intervention in the fields of postcolonial studies and world literature. I supplement existing scholarship of magical realism with new paradigms of critical thought, such as epistemology, mythopoeia, ecocriticism, intertextuality and discourse on human rights. Each of the key authors – Indigenous Australian Alexis Wright, New Zealand Maoris Keri Hulme and Witi Ihimaera, Indian-born cosmopolitans Amitav Ghosh and Salman Rushdie, and Chinese Nobel laureate Mo Yan – subjects the narrative mode to differing intellectual, socio-cultural and historical frameworks, and in the process reinvents magical realism to serve their own artistic purposes. The authors' key texts demonstrate the need to recalibrate theory on magical realism in contexts such as Alexis Wright's depiction of ongoing colonisation of Australia's first inhabitants in a supposedly postcolonial country, and Mo Yan's critique of post-communist China. I argue that magical realism has porous borders, not only geographically and culturally, but also in the sense that the narrative mode frequently spills over into other, different generic kinds such that the distinctions between them are often blurred. In addition, magical realism’s constant state of transformation makes it particularly difficult to define. Therefore, I propose a minimalist definition of the narrative mode and a flexible approach. However, underlying cultural elements and individual artistic expression in a text may sometimes limit magical realism’s utility as a tool for literary analysis. Finally, I explore the notion of a genealogy of magical realism based on polygenesis, emerging in different cultures at different times.</p>
spellingShingle postcolonialism
genre theory
magical realism
world literature
Holgate, B
Porous borders: the amorphous nature of magical realist fiction in Asia and Australasia
title Porous borders: the amorphous nature of magical realist fiction in Asia and Australasia
title_full Porous borders: the amorphous nature of magical realist fiction in Asia and Australasia
title_fullStr Porous borders: the amorphous nature of magical realist fiction in Asia and Australasia
title_full_unstemmed Porous borders: the amorphous nature of magical realist fiction in Asia and Australasia
title_short Porous borders: the amorphous nature of magical realist fiction in Asia and Australasia
title_sort porous borders the amorphous nature of magical realist fiction in asia and australasia
topic postcolonialism
genre theory
magical realism
world literature
work_keys_str_mv AT holgateb porousborderstheamorphousnatureofmagicalrealistfictioninasiaandaustralasia