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The creative disjunctures of twenty-first century global storytelling: Rana Dasgupta's Tokyo Cancelled.
- Source :
-
Textual Practice . Jan2020, Vol. 34 Issue 1, p107-126. 20p. - Publication Year :
- 2020
-
Abstract
- This essay argues that Tokyo Cancelled (2005) paradoxically seeks to resist the very forms of world-making totality implied in its narration by rendering the world simultaneously as knowable and unfathomable, flat and uneven. Featuring an ensemble of narratives that are locally-grounded yet part of a wider global network, Tokyo Cancelled activates a series of creative disjunctures via its decentred narrative structure and use of irrealist storytelling techniques. Through its frame narrative, the simulated orality of its thirteen anonymous storytellers resist a master narrative of globality by creating an ambivalent, deterritorialised reading of place, while the novel's irrealist aesthetic serves a double function of depicting the non-objective, disorganised nature of a globalised world, whilst also pointing to the very real issues of global inequality through its asymmetrical portrayal of the economic world-system. As the individual narratives feature marginalised subjects, I explore ways in which Tokyo Cancelled highlights conditions of displacement, empowerment and alienation within a deeply fractured neoliberal economy, and in doing so, how the novel presents one successful example of experimental writing in twenty-first-century works of global fiction by opening up a borderland site for its protagonists to connect in the world-city. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Subjects :
- *STORYTELLING
*SELF-efficacy
*EXPERIMENTAL literature
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 0950236X
- Volume :
- 34
- Issue :
- 1
- Database :
- Academic Search Index
- Journal :
- Textual Practice
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 140464638
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1080/0950236X.2018.1505776