Rogues in the Postcolony: Narrating Extraction and Itinerancy in India by Stacey Balkan (review)

IF 0.5 2区 文学 0 LITERATURE
Elizabeth Carolyn Miller
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The book’s central claim is that signature tropes of the sixteenth-century Spanish picaresque genre, along with similar rogue genres from the English-language tradition, have been picked up by contemporary Indian writers to communicate the conditions of environmental and social precarity that attend postcolonial life in the Global South. The book examines five novels by three Indian authors: Amitav Ghosh’s <em>Ibis Trilogy</em> (<em>Sea of Poppies</em> [2008], <em>River of Smoke</em> [2011], and <em>Flood of Fire</em> [2015]), Indra Sinha’s <em>Animal’s People</em> (2007), and Aravind Adiga’s <em>The White Tiger</em> (2008). Balkan’s approach to these novels is comparative across time and demonstrates the affordances of the picaresque to communicate postcolonial environmental and social violence in the contemporary global scene.</p> <p>Balkan describes the “rogue in the postcolony” in these novels as a descendant of early modern progenitors such as “the itinerant ‘Lazarillo de Tormes’ (1554)...scraping by in the shadows of imperial Spain” (1). What do these characters have in common across the gap of centuries? Both are subject to social conditions of displacement and mass migration, produced in earlier historical periods by the enclosure of the commons and in more recent history by extractive capitalism among other forces. From such conditions come subaltern mobility and itinerancy, qualities that define the rogue figure in literature and shape the picaresque genres in which he (and it is usually a he) features. Balkan describes “extreme deprivation and forced itinerancy” as key “tropes of the picaresque genre that can be traced to the sixteenth-century Spanish tradition” but that also provide a “template for narrating life in the shifting topographies of late capitalism” (4). The precarity of life under late capitalism is only intensified and worsened by climate change, and part of Balkan’s goal in the book is to show the utility of longstanding picaresque forms and tropes for narrating life in an era of climate chaos.</p> <p>Beyond their mobility and precarity, rogue and picaro figures are of interest to Balkan because of the way they challenge the assumptions baked into the bourgeois novel tradition about who, exactly, is human. Drawing on thinkers like Sylvia Wynter, Balkan maintains that “human” signifies “a particular mode of subject formation against which the <em>inhuman</em>—the slave, the colonial subject, the miner—is perpetually rendered a fungible object, inert and without agency” (10). In contradistinction to human-centered genres like the <em>Bildungsroman</em>, Balkan argues that cony-catching pamphlets, the rogue novel, and the <strong>[End Page 106]</strong> picaresque function like “a ‘dark mirror’ of the becoming bourgeois subject in early modern London or colonial and late-capitalist India” (15). Often, such genres subvert the bourgeois assumptions that undergird the novel form and the particular kinds of development-through-property that it tends to espouse.</p> <p>Balkan elaborates this argument across an introduction, three chapters, and a conclusion. The introduction summarizes her argument about genre and the picaresque, and the three chapters are organized by author and novel.</p> <p>The first chapter concentrates on Amitav Ghosh’s <em>Ibis Trilogy</em>, which Balkan describes as “the first materialist reckoning with the [Bay of Bengal’s] history” (38) and a major contribution to Indian Ocean Studies. Ghosh’s trilogy focuses on subaltern figures caught up in the nineteenth-century opium trade—farmers, lascars, factory workers—and shows how these characters are reduced “to the excremental surplus of the Indian Ocean trading community” (40). In “normative colonial histories,” Balkan says, such figures “are necessarily stripped of subjecthood and thus any formative narrative arc” (46). 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引用次数: 0

Abstract

In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

Reviewed by:

  • Rogues in the Postcolony: Narrating Extraction and Itinerancy in India by Stacey Balkan
  • Elizabeth Carolyn Miller
BALKAN, STACEY. Rogues in the Postcolony: Narrating Extraction and Itinerancy in India. Morgantown: West Virginia University Press, 2022. 216 pp. $99.99 hardcover; $29.99 paper; $29.99 e-book.

Stacey Balkan’s Rogues in the Postcolony: Narrating Extraction and Itinerancy in India reads recent Indian novels in the context of rogue literature, making an argument about old genres of colonialism and displacement that remain vital today. The book’s central claim is that signature tropes of the sixteenth-century Spanish picaresque genre, along with similar rogue genres from the English-language tradition, have been picked up by contemporary Indian writers to communicate the conditions of environmental and social precarity that attend postcolonial life in the Global South. The book examines five novels by three Indian authors: Amitav Ghosh’s Ibis Trilogy (Sea of Poppies [2008], River of Smoke [2011], and Flood of Fire [2015]), Indra Sinha’s Animal’s People (2007), and Aravind Adiga’s The White Tiger (2008). Balkan’s approach to these novels is comparative across time and demonstrates the affordances of the picaresque to communicate postcolonial environmental and social violence in the contemporary global scene.

Balkan describes the “rogue in the postcolony” in these novels as a descendant of early modern progenitors such as “the itinerant ‘Lazarillo de Tormes’ (1554)...scraping by in the shadows of imperial Spain” (1). What do these characters have in common across the gap of centuries? Both are subject to social conditions of displacement and mass migration, produced in earlier historical periods by the enclosure of the commons and in more recent history by extractive capitalism among other forces. From such conditions come subaltern mobility and itinerancy, qualities that define the rogue figure in literature and shape the picaresque genres in which he (and it is usually a he) features. Balkan describes “extreme deprivation and forced itinerancy” as key “tropes of the picaresque genre that can be traced to the sixteenth-century Spanish tradition” but that also provide a “template for narrating life in the shifting topographies of late capitalism” (4). The precarity of life under late capitalism is only intensified and worsened by climate change, and part of Balkan’s goal in the book is to show the utility of longstanding picaresque forms and tropes for narrating life in an era of climate chaos.

Beyond their mobility and precarity, rogue and picaro figures are of interest to Balkan because of the way they challenge the assumptions baked into the bourgeois novel tradition about who, exactly, is human. Drawing on thinkers like Sylvia Wynter, Balkan maintains that “human” signifies “a particular mode of subject formation against which the inhuman—the slave, the colonial subject, the miner—is perpetually rendered a fungible object, inert and without agency” (10). In contradistinction to human-centered genres like the Bildungsroman, Balkan argues that cony-catching pamphlets, the rogue novel, and the [End Page 106] picaresque function like “a ‘dark mirror’ of the becoming bourgeois subject in early modern London or colonial and late-capitalist India” (15). Often, such genres subvert the bourgeois assumptions that undergird the novel form and the particular kinds of development-through-property that it tends to espouse.

Balkan elaborates this argument across an introduction, three chapters, and a conclusion. The introduction summarizes her argument about genre and the picaresque, and the three chapters are organized by author and novel.

The first chapter concentrates on Amitav Ghosh’s Ibis Trilogy, which Balkan describes as “the first materialist reckoning with the [Bay of Bengal’s] history” (38) and a major contribution to Indian Ocean Studies. Ghosh’s trilogy focuses on subaltern figures caught up in the nineteenth-century opium trade—farmers, lascars, factory workers—and shows how these characters are reduced “to the excremental surplus of the Indian Ocean trading community” (40). In “normative colonial histories,” Balkan says, such figures “are necessarily stripped of subjecthood and thus any formative narrative arc” (46). Ghosh’s challenge, then, is to present them as historical agents in their own right while also conveying the wider forces of empire, trade, and nascent globalism that shaped their historical agency and...

后殖民中的流氓:Stacey Balkan 所著的《后殖民地的流氓:叙述印度的榨取和流动》(评论)
以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要:评论者: 后殖民中的流氓:作者:Stacey Balkan Elizabeth Carolyn Miller BALKAN, STACEY.Rogues in the Postcolony:后殖民中的流氓:叙述印度的榨取和流动》。莫根敦:西弗吉尼亚大学出版社,2022 年。216 pp.精装版 99.99 美元;纸质版 29.99 美元;电子书 29.99 美元。斯泰西-巴尔坎(Stacey Balkan)的《后殖民中的流氓》(Rogues in the Postcolony:在流氓文学的背景下解读了近期的印度小说,论证了殖民主义和流离失所的古老流派,这些流派在今天仍然至关重要。该书的核心主张是,十六世纪西班牙皮卡雷斯克体裁的标志性套路,以及英语传统中类似的流氓体裁,已被当代印度作家拾起,以传达全球南部后殖民生活中的环境和社会不稳定状况。本书探讨了三位印度作家的五部小说:阿米塔夫-高什的 "朱鹮三部曲"(《罂粟花海》[2008]、《烟河》[2011]和《火之洪流》[2015])、英德拉-辛哈的《动物之民》(2007)和阿拉温德-阿迪加的《白虎》(2008)。巴尔坎对这些小说进行了跨时空的比较,展示了比克小说在当代全球舞台上传播后殖民环境和社会暴力的能力。巴尔坎将这些小说中的 "后殖民中的流氓 "描述为早期现代作家的后代,如 "流动的'Lazarillo de Tormes'(1554 年)......在西班牙帝国的阴影下苟延残喘"(1)。跨越几个世纪的鸿沟,这些人物有什么共同点呢?他们都受制于流离失所和大规模迁徙的社会条件,这些条件在早期的历史时期是由公地圈地产生的,而在较近的历史时期则是由资本主义榨取和其他力量造成的。从这些条件中产生了次等人的流动性和巡回性,这些特质决定了文学中的流氓形象,并塑造了以他(通常是他)为特征的比克流派。巴尔坎将 "极度匮乏和被迫流动 "描述为 "比克流派的主要特征,这些特征可以追溯到十六世纪的西班牙传统",但同时也为 "叙述晚期资本主义不断变化的地形中的生活提供了模板"(4)。晚期资本主义下生活的不稳定性只会因气候变化而加剧和恶化,巴尔坎在书中的部分目标就是要展示长期存在的比克游记形式和套路在叙述气候混乱时代的生活时的效用。除了他们的流动性和不稳定性,流氓和皮卡洛形象之所以引起巴尔坎的兴趣,是因为他们挑战了资产阶级小说传统中关于人类的假设。巴尔坎借鉴西尔维亚-温特(Sylvia Wynter)等思想家的观点,认为 "人 "意味着 "一种特殊的主体形成模式,在这种模式下,非人类--奴隶、殖民主体、矿工--永远成为可替代的对象,没有活力,没有能动性"(10)。与《童话》(Bildungsroman)等以人为中心的文体不同,巴尔坎认为,《捕鼠小册子》、《流氓小说》和《比克雷斯科》[尾页106] 的功能就像 "一面'暗镜',照出了现代早期伦敦或殖民地和晚期资本主义印度的资产阶级主体正在形成"(15)。通常情况下,这类体裁颠覆了支撑小说形式的资产阶级假设,以及小说倾向于支持的通过财产实现发展的特殊类型。巴尔坎在引言、三章和结论中阐述了这一论点。导言总结了她关于体裁和比克小说的论点,三章则按作者和小说编排。第一章集中论述了阿米塔夫-高什的《朱鹮三部曲》,巴尔坎将其描述为 "对[孟加拉湾]历史的第一次唯物主义反思"(38),是对印度洋研究的重大贡献。戈什的三部曲重点描写了 19 世纪鸦片贸易中的次等人物--农夫、骑警、工厂工人--并展示了这些人物如何 "沦为印度洋贸易界的排泄物"(40)。巴尔坎说,在 "规范的殖民历史 "中,这些人物 "必然被剥夺了主体地位,因而也就失去了任何形成性的叙事弧线"(46)。因此,戈什所面临的挑战是将这些人物作为其自身的历史主体来呈现,同时传达帝国、贸易和新生的全球主义等更广泛的力量,这些力量塑造了他们的历史主体地位,也塑造了他们的......
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来源期刊
STUDIES IN THE NOVEL
STUDIES IN THE NOVEL LITERATURE-
CiteScore
0.40
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0.00%
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28
期刊介绍: From its inception, Studies in the Novel has been dedicated to building a scholarly community around the world-making potentialities of the novel. Studies in the Novel started as an idea among several members of the English Department of the University of North Texas during the summer of 1965. They determined that there was a need for a journal “devoted to publishing critical and scholarly articles on the novel with no restrictions on either chronology or nationality of the novelists studied.” The founding editor, University of North Texas professor of contemporary literature James W. Lee, envisioned a journal of international scope and influence. Since then, Studies in the Novel has staked its reputation upon publishing incisive scholarship on the canon-forming and cutting-edge novelists that have shaped the genre’s rich history. The journal continues to break new ground by promoting new theoretical approaches, a broader international scope, and an engagement with the contemporary novel as a form of social critique.
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