Neoliberal Disgust in Aravind Adiga's The White Tiger

被引:7
|
作者
Adkins, Alexander [1 ]
机构
[1] Calif State Univ Fresno, English, Fresno, CA 93740 USA
关键词
postcolonial fiction; satire; neoliberalism; scatology; Global South novel;
D O I
10.2979/jmodelite.42.3.10
中图分类号
I [文学];
学科分类号
05 ;
摘要
How does scatology function in postcolonial fiction today? And what might that idiom tell us about neoliberalism as a cynical political rationality sweeping the developing world? Aravind Adiga's exemplary 2008 satire on globalizing India, The White Tiger, parodies how neoliberalism normalizes misanthropic self-interest as the truth of society and human nature today. Michel Foucault identified this self-interest as a newly emergent form of rational choice, one that shapes human beings into "entrepreneurs of themselves." These subjects are governed by the brutally instrumentalist terms of investment, risk, and cost-benefit. The novel parodies this subject position through the language of neoliberal disgust, a form of scatological rhetoric that inverts the traditionally oppositional function of scatology by rendering the victims of underdevelopment the authors of their own oppression.
引用
收藏
页码:169 / 188
页数:20
相关论文
共 50 条