Rerouting The Worlding of Inter-Ethnic Estrangement Through Critical Solace: Shivani Sivagurunathan’s Yalpanam

Authors

  • Shanthini Pillai Faculty of Social Sciences and Humanities Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia
  • Jeslyn Sharnita Amarasekera Faculty of Social Science and Humanities Tunku Abdul Rahman University of Management and Technology
  • Angeline Wong Wei Wei Monash University Malaysia

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.17576/3L-2023-2903-18

Abstract

Notes of estrangement and exile, flight and peregrination are themes that are often closely threaded into the narratives of contemporary Malaysian novelists. This is especially so for those writers who live abroad but are continually drawn back across the sea of memory to draw on key episodes that have been the catalyst for the creation of the Malaysian diaspora. References to the racial riots of 1969 are foremost among these, with the Japanese Occupation a close second. We suggest that these have created an emerging empire of transnational narratives that has worlded Malaysia through the spectres of national trauma until many forget the very act of fictional worlding. In this paper, we interrogate the interior realities of home-based writings by choosing the novel Yalpanam (2021) by Shivani Sivagurunathan. We argue that the descriptive poetics of its narrative reworlds melancholy, trauma and shame through the interweaving of inter-ethnic and intergenerational perspectives. Taking centrestage is Yalpanam, the house from which the novel derives its very title that plays a significant role in rerouting the trajectory of inter-ethnic estrangement through an integration of solace and healing as part of the narrative’s rhetorical strategy.  This trajectory unfolds in the novel through a bricolage of the legacies of the past that form the inner sanctum of the novel, integrating the micro-narratives of letters, folk memory, family stories and formalised historical events. We suggest that these micro-narratives are collectively restorative and recuperative. It is through the commingling of these micro narratives that the novel presents what we see as a re-worlding of transnational aesthetics of estrangement that eventually engenders a sense of solidarity through intertwined ethno-memories. Keywords: inter-ethnic engagement; solace; Malaysian literature; worlding; inter-ethnic solidarity

Author Biographies

Shanthini Pillai, Faculty of Social Sciences and Humanities Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia

Shanthini Pillai (PhD) is Associate Professor at the Faculty of Social Sciences and Humanities, National University of Malaysia (UKM). Her research interests are anchored primarily in ethnic diversity, diaspora and transnationalism in literary and cultural texts with particular reference to the global South Asian diaspora. An emergent interest is in French Catholic Missionaries and the parish lives of Catholic diasporic Indians and Chinese in nineteenth century Malaya. She has headed several research projects on transnationalism and cultural identity and has also participated in transnational research projects. She has held Research Fellowships at the University of Queensland, Australia and the Asia Research Institute, Singapore. Her articles have appeared in various high indexed academic journals including The Australian Journal of Anthropology, International Journal of Cultural Studies, SOJOURN: Journal of Social Issues in Southeast Asia, The International Journal of the Sociology of Language and Social Sciences and Missions, among others.

Jeslyn Sharnita Amarasekera, Faculty of Social Science and Humanities Tunku Abdul Rahman University of Management and Technology

Jeslyn Sharnita Amarasekera  (PhD)  is Assistant Professor at Tunku Abdul Rahman University of Management and Technology (TAR UMT), Kuala Lumpur.  Her main research interest is in transnational Asian literature in English, specifically transnational Sri Lankan literature in English. She is also interested in inter-ethnic engagement as well as Buddhist perspectives within literary and cultural texts, especially with reference to individual identity and ethnic diversity.   

Angeline Wong Wei Wei, Monash University Malaysia

Angeline Wong Wei Wei (PhD) is a lecturer at Malaysia Immersion and Pathways, Monash University Malaysia.  Her research interests include ethnic studies, inter-ethnic engagement and cultural studies.

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Published

2023-09-22

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Special Section