SEARCH FOR SELF-CONSCIOUSNESS IN V.S. NAIPAUL’S A HOUSE FOR MR. BISWAS

Authors

  • Sunil Assistant Professor of English MKJK Mahavidyalya, Rohtak
  • B.R.

Keywords:

SELF-CONSCIOUSNESS

Abstract

V.S.Naipaul is, beyond doubt, a great master of fiction and literary device, a craftsman of style and imagery. His art consists in reducing complexities to simple images and creating original descriptions that are pregnant with suggestive possibilities. The author tries constantly to understand human condition. He appears to be worried about man’s inclination towards lying and self-deception in his works. In all his writings Naipaul has focused on individuals attempting to escape fate. For Naipaul, fate belongs to a world of magic, myth and ritual where only the past exists but not history. According to him, it is history that provides a sense of wholeness and belonging to both people and nation. Many of Naipaul’s fictional figures are at the mercy of social and political forces and also their own personal compulsions. They remain ‘unhoused’ in themselves and are, therefore, located on the borderlines of fixed and shifting identities, living half-lives prescribed by the colonial and postcolonial experience.

References

R.K. Jain, (1998), "Indian diaspora, globalisation and multiculturalism: A cultural Analysis", Contributions to Indian Sociology.

A House for Mr. Biswas. London: Andre Deutsch, 1961..

(1987), The Enigma of Arrival, London: Viking.

(1994), India: A Wounded Civilisation, London: Heinemann.

Shashi Kamra. The Novels of V.S. Naipaul New Delhi: Prestige, 1990).

Akhtar Jamal Khan. V. S. Naiapul: A Critical Study, New Delhi: Creative Books, 1998.

R. Namrata Mahanta, V. S. Naipaul: The Indian Trilogy, New Delhi: Atlantic, 2004.

Landeg White, V. S. Naipaul: A Critical Introduction, London: Macmillan, 1975.

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Published

2017-12-30

How to Cite

Sunil, & B.R. (2017). SEARCH FOR SELF-CONSCIOUSNESS IN V.S. NAIPAUL’S A HOUSE FOR MR. BISWAS. Universal Research Reports, 4(11), 72–75. Retrieved from https://urr.shodhsagar.com/index.php/j/article/view/343

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Section

Original Research Article