Post-Colonial Themes: Chapter-Iii
Post-Colonial Themes: Chapter-Iii
Post-Colonial Themes: Chapter-Iii
POST-COLONIAL THEMES
Derek Walcott has stated a satire on the Colonial World of the New
World in a poem.
“Adam has an idea,
He and the snake would share
The loss of Eden for the profit.
So both made the new world,
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It was until the mid twentieth century, that European powers ruled over
vast regions of the Asian, African and South American continents. There was
political governance, economic exploitation and cultural domination. Gradually,
the transformation began in the later half of the nineteenth century and the mid
twentieth century. The Anglo Indian Community uprose with the arrival of
Portuguese not the Britain. But the word Anglo was attached with the arrival of
British and was accepted in the Indian constitution, 366 (2).
Finally, their struggles began through out the colonies. These struggles,
resulted in political independence for many states in Asia and Africa. Therefore
in temporal terms these independent colonies were called Post Colonial
suggesting liberation from imperialism.
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46
Nial Ferqusson quoted in New York Times on 27th April 2003. “The
British Empire has had a pretty lousily press from a generation of Post Colonial
historians..... affronted by its racism.... the reality is ...... the British were
significantly more successful at establishing market economies, the rule of law
47
Twentieth century's last decades has to its own credits a literature which
dealt with the following aspects globalization, ethenic identities, minority issues
and sessionist movements. Uma Paramswaran is the diasporic writer. The
others diasporic writers are David Dabydeen (A Harlots Progress), Hanif
Kureashi (The Buddha of Suburbia), Bharati Mukherjee (Jasmine) and Timethy
Mo.
To talk further about post colonial literature the poetry of Agha Shahid
Ali, Meena Alexander and Sujata Bhatt did explore hybrid identities.
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In Post Colonial literature, they went beyond the third world Edward
Said had pointed out the following pre suppositions. This is the humanist
tradition : (Orientation).
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Ø This history and beliefs are stress in the great books of western canon.11
In Dear Deedi, My Sister, a young women from Kenya and another from
Nigeria suffer from nostalgic pains. They symbolize the feelings of Uma
Parameswaran a diasporen herself.
Wemahu : Under a sky more vast then any I've seen,
On snow more cold than ever I dreamed,
I stand alone,
Amid masks that speak an alien tongue
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51
52
Other than these the works of Athol Fugard and Brain Friel can also be
classified as postcolonial. Who can deny the importance of Jack Davis,
regarded as the father of Aboriginal theatre in Australia. Dennis Scott is
considered a powerful writer and director. He has been central to the
development of Jamaican performance idioms ; Michel Tremblay is the first
Quebecois playwright to challenge Canada's predominantly Angolo-centric
canon ; Vijay Tendulkar, author of Ghasiram Kotwal has reflected a stunning
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There is a wide variety of literature with in the field of theatre, that tends
to eschew narrow conceptions of dialogue dependent performance. It is easy to
portray textual dialogue based postcolonial plays. Otherwise, pictorial
presentation is a must.
In some post colonial regions, such a project has led to the formation of
creole and Pidgin variant of English. Which have become independent and
separate languages Edward Braithwaite says of Nation Language in Caribbean
“English may be in terms of some of its lexical features. But in its contours, its
rhythm and timbre, its sound explosions, it is not English, even though the
words as you hear them, might be English to greater or lesser degree”.17
Variants of English now claim status as separate languages and indeed function
in many countries.
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All said and done, theatre is the medium which relies upon intonation,
pitch of voice and gesture. These three elements enable theatre to cross barriers
of languages. The critics consider any kind glossing as Eurocentric. It hampers
with the spirit of the play.
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The woman is an individual who has throbbing pulse i.e. alive to the
core with feelings and as emotions. The woman is aware of her own
perspective. Not only of her own life but also of the world around her. The
Indian woman may be rich or poor, traditional or modern, in the writer
background, will have her inner strength and integrity. In her own resolute way,
she will know how to find her path in the sexually exploitative discriminatory
world.
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In the last decades of the twentieth century gender and sexuality have
become common themes in Literature. Gender and role of women in the post
colonial nation state has been the focus in the writing of Anita Desai, Ama Ata
Aidoo, Sumit Namjoshi, Budhhi Emecheta and Nawal El Saadawi, Uma
Parmeswaran and Manjula Padmanabhan.
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One of the earliest plays (in India) like Theatre Union's Om Swaha (first
staged in 1980, theme of dowry in Hindu marriages) ; Dafa 180 (dealing with
rape and legislation were successful. Social Trap (by Garib Dongari Sangathan)
; The Girl is Born (by Stree Mukti Sangathana) and Brides are not for burning
(1993) by Dina Mehta (won the award) received critical attention.
Savannah : until the revolutionaries told the women, put down your
guns and pick up your babies.....And into the Kitchen”.25 The fact remains -
Feminine duties to be resumed with political independence. A woman can stand
up to man, as he needs but she has to step down as required by the man.
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2. Ibid.
3. Walcott, Derek. Collected Poems New York, Farrar Straus and Giroux,
1986.p.3001
5. Ibid
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15. Boire, Gary. Sucking Kumaras Canadian Literature ,Native writers and
Canadian writing. academic edu. 124/125 ,1990, P 306.
16. Gilbert, Helen. Post Colonial Plays : An Anthology, London, New York,
Routledge, 2008, p.215.
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22. Amirch, Amal and Lisa Suchair Majaj. Going Global The Transnational
Reception of Third World Women writers, New York : Garland, (ed)
2000, p.164.
24. Sahgal, Nayantara. Rich like us, New York : New Duotones, 1988 P-68.
25. Moraga, Cherrie. The Hungry Women, Albuquerque : West End Press,
2001, p.24.
26. Moraga Cherrie. Queer Azttan Reformation of Chicano Tribe The Last
Generation, Boston : South End Press , 1993, p.150.
28. Gilbert, Helen. Post Colonial Plays : An Anthology, London, New York,
Routledge, 2008, p.216.
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