The graveyard and the Garden: Reading Connectivities in Rana Dasgupta’s The Changeling

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

The graveyard and the Garden : Reading Connectivities in Rana Dasgupta’s The Changeling. / Bildsøe, Helle Schulz; Rahbek, Ulla.

In: The Journal of Commonwealth Literature, Vol. 54, No. 2, 2019, p. 190–206.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Bildsøe, HS & Rahbek, U 2019, 'The graveyard and the Garden: Reading Connectivities in Rana Dasgupta’s The Changeling', The Journal of Commonwealth Literature, vol. 54, no. 2, pp. 190–206. https://doi.org/10.1177/0021989416685756

APA

Bildsøe, H. S., & Rahbek, U. (2019). The graveyard and the Garden: Reading Connectivities in Rana Dasgupta’s The Changeling. The Journal of Commonwealth Literature, 54(2), 190–206. https://doi.org/10.1177/0021989416685756

Vancouver

Bildsøe HS, Rahbek U. The graveyard and the Garden: Reading Connectivities in Rana Dasgupta’s The Changeling. The Journal of Commonwealth Literature. 2019;54(2):190–206. https://doi.org/10.1177/0021989416685756

Author

Bildsøe, Helle Schulz ; Rahbek, Ulla. / The graveyard and the Garden : Reading Connectivities in Rana Dasgupta’s The Changeling. In: The Journal of Commonwealth Literature. 2019 ; Vol. 54, No. 2. pp. 190–206.

Bibtex

@article{87011c4873974c458304941f72956c57,
title = "The graveyard and the Garden: Reading Connectivities in Rana Dasgupta{\textquoteright}s The Changeling",
abstract = "In the novel Tokyo Cancelled (2005), Rana Dasgupta explores the contemporary age of globalization as a time of chaotic change. Tokyo Cancelled is composed as a story cycle of 13 tales. This article focuses on one of these tales in particular, “The Changeling”. “The Changeling” relates the tumultuous experiences of Bernard, who is a changeling and archetypal stranger in the pestilence-ridden city of contemporary Paris. The article explores the juxtaposition of systemic and organic networks as the central trope through which Dasgupta explores change and connectivities in a global twenty-first-century moment. We argue that the story presents a process of symbolic transformation whereby the national capital changes into a global city. This change signifies a shift from a national towards a planetary perspective. “The Changeling” comprises at least two different kinds of networks which converge and conflate into one overarching web that is the metropolis: there is a systemic network of control materialized in Montparnasse graveyard and an organic network out of control manifested in a community garden where people congregate to tell stories. Indeed, Dasgupta revisits Benjaminian storytelling as a global networking practice which, while locally contextualized in an impromptu garden in Paris, hints at an awareness of worldwide connectivity.",
keywords = "Faculty of Humanities, Netv{\ae}rk, historiefort{\ae}lling, Rana Dasgupta",
author = "Bilds{\o}e, {Helle Schulz} and Ulla Rahbek",
year = "2019",
doi = "10.1177/0021989416685756",
language = "English",
volume = "54",
pages = "190–206",
journal = "The Journal of Commonwealth Literature",
issn = "0021-9894",
publisher = "SAGE Publications",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The graveyard and the Garden

T2 - Reading Connectivities in Rana Dasgupta’s The Changeling

AU - Bildsøe, Helle Schulz

AU - Rahbek, Ulla

PY - 2019

Y1 - 2019

N2 - In the novel Tokyo Cancelled (2005), Rana Dasgupta explores the contemporary age of globalization as a time of chaotic change. Tokyo Cancelled is composed as a story cycle of 13 tales. This article focuses on one of these tales in particular, “The Changeling”. “The Changeling” relates the tumultuous experiences of Bernard, who is a changeling and archetypal stranger in the pestilence-ridden city of contemporary Paris. The article explores the juxtaposition of systemic and organic networks as the central trope through which Dasgupta explores change and connectivities in a global twenty-first-century moment. We argue that the story presents a process of symbolic transformation whereby the national capital changes into a global city. This change signifies a shift from a national towards a planetary perspective. “The Changeling” comprises at least two different kinds of networks which converge and conflate into one overarching web that is the metropolis: there is a systemic network of control materialized in Montparnasse graveyard and an organic network out of control manifested in a community garden where people congregate to tell stories. Indeed, Dasgupta revisits Benjaminian storytelling as a global networking practice which, while locally contextualized in an impromptu garden in Paris, hints at an awareness of worldwide connectivity.

AB - In the novel Tokyo Cancelled (2005), Rana Dasgupta explores the contemporary age of globalization as a time of chaotic change. Tokyo Cancelled is composed as a story cycle of 13 tales. This article focuses on one of these tales in particular, “The Changeling”. “The Changeling” relates the tumultuous experiences of Bernard, who is a changeling and archetypal stranger in the pestilence-ridden city of contemporary Paris. The article explores the juxtaposition of systemic and organic networks as the central trope through which Dasgupta explores change and connectivities in a global twenty-first-century moment. We argue that the story presents a process of symbolic transformation whereby the national capital changes into a global city. This change signifies a shift from a national towards a planetary perspective. “The Changeling” comprises at least two different kinds of networks which converge and conflate into one overarching web that is the metropolis: there is a systemic network of control materialized in Montparnasse graveyard and an organic network out of control manifested in a community garden where people congregate to tell stories. Indeed, Dasgupta revisits Benjaminian storytelling as a global networking practice which, while locally contextualized in an impromptu garden in Paris, hints at an awareness of worldwide connectivity.

KW - Faculty of Humanities

KW - Netværk

KW - historiefortælling

KW - Rana Dasgupta

U2 - 10.1177/0021989416685756

DO - 10.1177/0021989416685756

M3 - Journal article

VL - 54

SP - 190

EP - 206

JO - The Journal of Commonwealth Literature

JF - The Journal of Commonwealth Literature

SN - 0021-9894

IS - 2

ER -

ID: 182363448