“An Unremembered Time” 65
“An Unremembered Time”:
Secular Criticism in Pankaj
Mishra’s The Romantics
Jill Didur
Concordia University, Montreal, Canada
Abstract
In Pankaj Mishra’s novel, The Romantics, Samar writes about his struggle
to reconcile diverse cultural influences in his private life with a political
context increasingly defined by a narrow definition of Hindu identity
during the late 1980s and early 1990s in India. While he characterizes
India’s political rhetoric as dominated by notions of cultural purity and
religious orthodoxy, my essay argues that the novel’s setting and historical
context is rife with symbols of India’s inter-cultural and hybrid past that
Samar refers to as emerging out of “an unremembered time”. I argue
that Edward Said’s notion of “secular criticism”, with its emphasis on
exilic consciousness, is a particularly apt way of unpacking the novel’s
examination of majoritarianism through ironic representations of Hindu
nationalism, Indo-Saracenic architecture and the history of the founding
of Benares Hindu University. This paper tracks how Samar’s fictional
memoir is marked by a growing unease with uneven effects of modernity
on Indian society in the midst of escalating sectarian violence in the last
decade of the twentieth century.
Keywords
Edward Said, secular criticism, exile, Orientalism, Pankaj Mishra, The
Romantics, An End to Suffering: The Buddha in the World, Hindu
nationalism, Indo-Saracenic, Benares Hindu University
Copyright © 2009 SAGE Publications http://jcl.sagepub.com
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Vol 44(2): 65–85. DOI: 10.1177/0021989409105119