Triumph and Trauma: Reconfiguring Self and Ethnicity through Cultural Memories in Select Aboriginal Narratives of Maurice Kenny and Narayan
Abstract
The thesis titled “Triumph and Trauma: Reconfiguring Self and Ethnicity through
Cultural Memories in Select Aboriginal Narratives of Maurice Kenny and Narayan” is an
attempt to analyse and decipher the function of the representation of cultural memories in
the aboriginal narratives of Maurice Kenny and Narayan. Maurice Kenny is a Native
American author from the Mohawk tribe of North America and Narayan is from the
Malayaraya tribe of Kerala. The thesis pays attention to the recurring and constant presence
of the cultural memories of trauma and triumph in the works of these authors, the modes of
operation of the cultural memories, the convergence and divergence in the writing style of
these writers and the results that they aim at while rigorously accommodating the cultural
memories in their works. The cultural memories can be the memories of the traumatic
incidents that happened to the tribal communities that effectively constituted to the
dismantling of the cultural and social fabric of the community. Such traumatic incidents are
called cultural trauma. These cultural memories also signify the memories of the days of
grandeur and glory of the tribal communities.
Adhering to the theoretical frame work of cultural memory and cultural trauma the
thesis argues that the repeated representation of the cultural memories of triumph and
trauma in literature adequately constitutes to the reintegration of the cultural identity of the
aboriginal communities, which is fragmented in the process of external as well as internal
invasions. Thus the tribal communities can regain their ethnic pride and act collectively for
the common goal of resisting hegemony and reclaiming social and political agency. The
cultural memories of the aboriginal communities can be hence called counter memories.
The works of Narayan and Maurice Kenny are active spaces of cultural memory reiteration.
The thesis has analysed the short stories and novels of Narayan and the short stories and
poems of Maurice Kenny. An invariable presence of the cultural memories of triumph and
trauma constitutes the narrative fabric of both the writers, even though both the writers
diverge in their treatment of the same theme. When Maurice Kenny and Narayan represent
the cultural memories of the tradition, culture, vision on life and nature and the tragic plight
of their respective aboriginal communities,theyact as cohesive agents of cultural identity re-
integration.The dispossessed and displaced communities are thereby enabled to act
collectively for a common political cause.
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- Doctoral Theses [493]