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After Empire: Scott, Naipaul, Rushdie

paperbackMarch 15, 1997
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ISBN-13: 9780226304755 ISBN-10: 0226304752
Publisher
University of Chicago Press
Binding
paperback
Published
March 15, 1997
Weight
0.7 lbs
Dimensions
21.60×1.80×14.00 cm

About this book

After Empire: Scott, Naipaul, Rushdie by Gorra, Michael. paperback edition. ISBN: 9780226304755.

In After Empire Michael Gorra explores how three novelists of empire—Paul Scott, V. S. Naipaul, and Salman Rushdie—have charted the perpetually drawn and perpetually blurred boundaries of identity left in the wake of British imperialism. Arguing against a model of cultural identity based on race, Gorra begins with Scotts portrait, in The Raj Quartet, of the character Hari Kumar—a seeming oxymoron, an "English boy with a dark brown skin," whose very existence undercuts the belief in an absolute distinction between England and India. He then turns to the opposed figures of Naipaul and Rushdie, the two great novelists of the Indian diaspora. Whereas Naipauls long and controversial career maps the "deep disorder" spread by both imperialism and its passing, Rushdie demonstrates that certain consequences of that disorder, such as migrancy and mimicry, have themselves become creative forces. After Empire provides engaging and enlightening readings of postcolonial fiction, showing how imperialism helped shape British national identity—and how, after the end of empire, that identity must now be reconfigured.