Diasporic History and Transnational Networks in Anita Desai’s Baumgartner’s Bombay

Lucio De Capitani (Università Ca' Foscari Venezia)

Abstract

Baumgartner’s Bombay di Anita Desai adotta la prospettiva di un ebreo  tedesco scampato allo sterminio nazista e di un’ex cabarettista per collegare le storie di India e Germania. Quest’articolo esamina come questi personaggi – testimoni di una molteplicità di storie e ricettacoli di una varietà di istanze culturali – diano vita ad una rete diasporica di connessioni che smantella la solidità della storia ufficiale e dà un senso alla desolata esperienza dell’esilio.

DOI: 10.17456/SIMPLE-7

Bibliografia

Bach, Steven. 2011. Marlene Dietrich: Life and Legend. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.

Belliappa, Mukund. 2008. Bombay Writing: Are You Experienced? The Antioch Review, 66, 2: 345–362.

Demas Bliss, Corinne & Anita Desai. 1988. Against the Current: A Conversation with Anita Desai. The Massachusetts Review, 29, 3: 521–537.

Desai, Anita & Lalita Pandit. 1995. A Sense of Detail and a Sense of Order: Anita Desai Interviewed by Lalita Pandit. Literary India: Comparative Studies in Aesthetics, Colonialism, and Culture. Patrick Colm Hogan & Lalita Pandit, eds. Albany: SUNYP, 153–172.

Desai, Anita. 2007 [1988]. Baumgartners Bombay. New Delhi: Random House India. Isherwood, Christopher. 1998 [1939]. Goodbye to Berlin. London: Vintage.

Mufti, Aamir R. 2007. Enlightenment in the Colony: The Jewish Question and the Crisis of Postcolonial Culture. Princeton-Oxford: Princeton University Press.

Said, Edward W. 2000. Reflections on Exile. Reflections on Exile and Other Essays. Edward

W. Said. Harvard: Harvard University Press, 173-186.

Stähler, Axel. 2010. The Holocaust in the Nursery: Anita Desai’s Baumgartners Bombay.

Journal of Postcolonial Writing, 46, 1: 76–88.

Views: 938

Download PDF

Downloads: 667