That Heathen Air
That Heathen Air
That Heathen Air
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International Journal of Interdisciplinary Research in Arts and Humanities (IJIRAH)
Impact Factor: 5.225, ISSN (Online): 2456 - 3145
(www.dvpublication.com) Volume 3, Issue 1, 2018
people find it quite hard to leave their homelands. It is made vividly clear that Saeed and Nadia don't move until
the time doing so becomes inevitable.
The first few chapters of the novel cover the reasons and circumstances which compel people to flee.
Mohsin Hamid painstakingly explores the whole process of painful „leaving‟ and the dilemmas that go on in the
minds of people once they choose to leave. Saeed and Nadia decide to leave only when the militants gain a
strong foothold over the city, controlling all the basic necessities of life. They are left with no choice but to flee
for their lives, leaving their loved ones behind. The fact of migration is agonising and full of violence. “When
we migrate, we murder from our lives those we leave behind.” (Hamid, 2017: 94)
At this point, Mohsin Hamid introduces an element of magic realism of secret rectangular black doors
which transport people to different places in an instant. In magic realism, “writers weave, in an ever-shifting
pattern, a sharply etched realism in representing ordinary events and details together with fantastic and
dreamlike elements….”² Unlike the characters in this novel real life refugees face immeasurable dangers in
crossing over to safer places. They don't have the luxury of magic doors to escape. And this experiment makes
Exit West quite distinct from Mohsin Hamid‟s earlier attempts in the genre. The concept of doors is “effective in
evoking the proximity of the desperate zones and the more secure ones in the world today, suggesting that
building walls and immigration regimes of extreme vetting is not just impractical, but downright inhumane.”³
Some readers find it an unnecessary element in such a story which, they say, should have got the risky
adventures common refugees face. But Mohsin Hamid, in an interview, defends the use of surreal on the lines
that he wasn't interested in how migrants move.
“It can be a mistake to focus too much upon how they move…. The bulk of the migrant or refugee
story is „What made you want to leave home?‟.... „What happened to you in the new place?‟ And those two parts
of the story are the parts I wanted to focus on.”⁴
The readers might miss the horrifying and perilous refugee journeys but that is not what Hamid was
interested in. His focal point is what happens to refugees before „leaving‟ their homeland and after „arriving‟ at
their new destinations.
The door is not just a symbol for instant transportation of refugees but also a strong character
influencing the lives of millions of people. Mohsin Hamid weaves it in to the main thread of the narrative in
such a dexterous manner that we take it in immediately without any reservations. The method, therefore, is a
deliberate inclusion, not a mere chance, which enables the author to add an essential element to the ordinary
lives of refugees the influences of modern technology.
Conclusion:
Exit West is a story about dislocated people and their experiences, and the tale is made typical with the
help of magically created doors that take refugees to different places. The novelist is guessing an age in which
all the humankind will be refugees. We are provided with glimpses of a migration apocalypse where everybody
seems to be on the move. Wars and drastic climate changes cannot be ruled out in the time to come. All this
gives Exit West a faint tinge of science fiction as well. While dealing with the subject of inevitable mass
migration of people, the physical and mental agony faced by refugees has also been exquisitely portrayed.
Hamid has tried to alter our perception about the concepts of nationhood and borders. He posits a quite different
approach towards the issue of mass migration of people by presenting a totally different view of world
geography and the artificial borders. The novelist is reminding us that it is imperative to rethink our beliefs
about the world and our future.
References:
1. Hamid, Mohsin, 2017. Exit West, Penguin Random House India: Hamish Hamilton.
2. Abrahams, M. H. 2016. A Glossary of Literary Terms, 8th Edition, Cengage Learning, p. 258
3. Door that takes you elsewherehttp://www.thehindu.com/books/books-reviews/door-that-takes-you-
elsewhere/article17527018.ece
4. Magical novel 'Exit West' explores what makes refugees leave homehttps://youtu.be/sPQD2SIZTsg
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