ABSTRACT

Since the 9/11 attacks terror has established its permeating hold on society’s psyche. Creative writing, a popular and visible cultural witness to the strain, has taken up this destabilization with remarkable regularity. Troubled Testimonies focuses on the Indian novel in English, deriving inspiration from these disturbances, to essay a unique grasp of the cultural make-up of the times and its reverberations on the sense of self and belonging to the nation. This first full-length study of terror in the subcontinental novel in English (from India) places it in the world context and analyzes the fictional coverage of the spread of terrorism across the country and its cultural fallout. The enigmatic coming together of the contemporary with the anguish of loss and betrayal unleashed by terror occasions a significant redefinition of the issues of trauma, conflict and gender, and opens a fresh window to Indian writing and the culture of the subcontinent, and a new paradigm in literary and cultural criticism termed ‘post-terrorism’.

Lucid and thought provoking, this book will be useful to scholars and researchers of South Asian literature, cultural studies, postcolonial studies, history, politics and sociology.

chapter |22 pages

Under the Shadow of Terror

The contemporary Indian novel

part |79 pages

The Geographical Ambit of the Postterrorist Novel

chapter |17 pages

‘Sad Paradise' 1

Kashmir I

chapter |20 pages

‘The Collapse of Paradise itself' 1

Kashmir II

chapter |20 pages

‘The Home Story' 1

Terrorism in the heartlands

chapter |20 pages

‘Terror International' 1

Global terror and the postterrorist novel

part |81 pages

Formal and Thematic Ambit

chapter |29 pages

‘Visual Reconstruction' 1

The graphic novel and terrorism

chapter |15 pages

Conclusion

‘Let me cry out in that void': reckoning postterrorism in fiction