Caged Bodies, Raging Minds, Dissident Voices: Alexandr Solzhenitsyn and Taslima Nasreen

This paper aims to analyse the mental state of Taslima Nasreen and Alexandr Solzhenitsyn, writers that are primarily celebrated for their rich casket of fictional narratives, through poems written at a juncture in their lives when they were dealing with the pain of separation and displacement from h...

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Main Author: Ananya Bhattacharyya
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The International Academic Forum 2021-08-01
Series:IAFOR Journal of Arts & Humanities
Subjects:
Online Access:https://iafor.org/journal/iafor-journal-of-arts-and-humanities/volume-8-issue-1/article-8/
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spelling doaj-3e826c2b4b5040ec8e81a9d01093d6df2021-09-08T07:39:56Zeng The International Academic ForumIAFOR Journal of Arts & Humanities2187-06162021-08-01819510510.22492/ijah.8.1.08Caged Bodies, Raging Minds, Dissident Voices: Alexandr Solzhenitsyn and Taslima NasreenAnanya Bhattacharyya0Seth Anandram Jaipuria College, Kolkata, IndiaThis paper aims to analyse the mental state of Taslima Nasreen and Alexandr Solzhenitsyn, writers that are primarily celebrated for their rich casket of fictional narratives, through poems written at a juncture in their lives when they were dealing with the pain of separation and displacement from home and country. As a consequence of defying their respective governments through their revolutionary writings, such a separation is accompanied by the loss of a stable identity. Although they do not share the socio-political context that resulted in exile, the commonly felt strains and fissures of exile have guided their perspectives through particularly intimate landscapes, so that it is possible to describe their poems’ meaning in a wholly decontextualised manner. They both are, in a way, separated from conventional contexts: exile is an alienating experience, and home, no longer homelike, is perhaps an even more estranging place.https://iafor.org/journal/iafor-journal-of-arts-and-humanities/volume-8-issue-1/article-8/alexandr solzhenitsyndissidenceexile; identitytaslima nasreen
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ananya Bhattacharyya
spellingShingle Ananya Bhattacharyya
Caged Bodies, Raging Minds, Dissident Voices: Alexandr Solzhenitsyn and Taslima Nasreen
IAFOR Journal of Arts & Humanities
alexandr solzhenitsyn
dissidence
exile; identity
taslima nasreen
author_facet Ananya Bhattacharyya
author_sort Ananya Bhattacharyya
title Caged Bodies, Raging Minds, Dissident Voices: Alexandr Solzhenitsyn and Taslima Nasreen
title_short Caged Bodies, Raging Minds, Dissident Voices: Alexandr Solzhenitsyn and Taslima Nasreen
title_full Caged Bodies, Raging Minds, Dissident Voices: Alexandr Solzhenitsyn and Taslima Nasreen
title_fullStr Caged Bodies, Raging Minds, Dissident Voices: Alexandr Solzhenitsyn and Taslima Nasreen
title_full_unstemmed Caged Bodies, Raging Minds, Dissident Voices: Alexandr Solzhenitsyn and Taslima Nasreen
title_sort caged bodies, raging minds, dissident voices: alexandr solzhenitsyn and taslima nasreen
publisher The International Academic Forum
series IAFOR Journal of Arts & Humanities
issn 2187-0616
publishDate 2021-08-01
description This paper aims to analyse the mental state of Taslima Nasreen and Alexandr Solzhenitsyn, writers that are primarily celebrated for their rich casket of fictional narratives, through poems written at a juncture in their lives when they were dealing with the pain of separation and displacement from home and country. As a consequence of defying their respective governments through their revolutionary writings, such a separation is accompanied by the loss of a stable identity. Although they do not share the socio-political context that resulted in exile, the commonly felt strains and fissures of exile have guided their perspectives through particularly intimate landscapes, so that it is possible to describe their poems’ meaning in a wholly decontextualised manner. They both are, in a way, separated from conventional contexts: exile is an alienating experience, and home, no longer homelike, is perhaps an even more estranging place.
topic alexandr solzhenitsyn
dissidence
exile; identity
taslima nasreen
url https://iafor.org/journal/iafor-journal-of-arts-and-humanities/volume-8-issue-1/article-8/
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