ABSTRACT

This book engages with current developments in postcolonial research, exploring notions of cultural transmission, tradition and modernity, authenticity, cross-cultural aesthetics and postcolonial ethics. The author considers the ethical responsibility of the postcolonial intellectual, enhancing our understanding of this topic through the concept of custodianship, which may be defined as a responsibility towards the other in forms of cultural and literary inheritance. The author introduces custodianship as a central theme and a vital question for the committed intellectual today, proposing original interpretations of major postcolonial texts by key figures including Anita Desai, Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, Mahasweta Devi and Arundhati Roy. Through close reading and historical analysis, Postcolonial Custodianship reveals that a practice of custodianship has always been an essential element of these writers’ ethical engagement, yet in a way that has never been explored. The author contends that the question of custodianship should not be seen as a merely negative designation; it is by redefining the very meaning of custodianship that the ethical dimension of postcolonialism can be rediscovered.

chapter |26 pages

Introduction

Poetic Inheritance, Postcolonial Custodianship

chapter |33 pages

Custodian of the Unspeakable

Reading Anita Desai

chapter |33 pages

Guarding the Secret

Allegory and Realism in Imaginary Maps

chapter |39 pages

The Curators of the Real

Arundhati Roy's Custodianship

chapter |38 pages

Woven into a Song

Cultural Relays in The London Jungle Book

chapter |19 pages

Conclusion

“Custodying” the Future