When West Meets East in E. M. Forster’s Hill of Devi

The Hill of Devi relates Forster's experience of deterritorialisation in India; in spite of his efforts to adapt to the country, thus making cross-cultural encounters possible, his letters convey a paradoxical sense of belonging and un-belonging. The Hill of Devi reveals a gap between the autho...

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Main Author: Catherine Delmas
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Presses Universitaires de la Méditerranée 2009-11-01
Series:Études Britanniques Contemporaines
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/ebc/3678
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spelling doaj-e7fdbf6b1c0d4bcba5f0ec31ad5839122020-11-24T22:00:39ZengPresses Universitaires de la MéditerranéeÉtudes Britanniques Contemporaines1168-49172271-54442009-11-0137152610.4000/ebc.3678When West Meets East in E. M. Forster’s Hill of DeviCatherine DelmasThe Hill of Devi relates Forster's experience of deterritorialisation in India; in spite of his efforts to adapt to the country, thus making cross-cultural encounters possible, his letters convey a paradoxical sense of belonging and un-belonging. The Hill of Devi reveals a gap between the author’s cultural background, his Englishness which seeps through the narrative frame, theatricality, tongue-in-cheek humour, comedy, and his winks at the reader, and the “queerness” of India. The eurocentric, distorting gaze of the foreign observer, prone to focus on anomaly, reveals a gap between a cultural model or center (Englishness) and what deviates from it, i.e. ex-centricity. India undergoes a paradoxical process of exaggeration and reduction which turns it into a stage or a carnival. Intertextuality (Gilbert and Sullivan, Alice in Wonderland) casts light on reversal, incongruity and blurred boundaries. India in The Hill of Devi is both a cultural, an ideological and an aesthetic construct. The gap between East and West can finally be measured in terms of differing, between perception and representation, writing and editing. India is not a maieutic space but remains a “muddle”. Yet Forster’s encounter with India had a poietic function and he turned it into a mythic and aesthetic representation of otherness in A Passage to India, supported by a political reflection on imperialism.http://journals.openedition.org/ebc/3678The Hill of DeviE.M. Forsterbelongingdeterritorialisationeurocentrismexclusion
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Catherine Delmas
spellingShingle Catherine Delmas
When West Meets East in E. M. Forster’s Hill of Devi
Études Britanniques Contemporaines
The Hill of Devi
E.M. Forster
belonging
deterritorialisation
eurocentrism
exclusion
author_facet Catherine Delmas
author_sort Catherine Delmas
title When West Meets East in E. M. Forster’s Hill of Devi
title_short When West Meets East in E. M. Forster’s Hill of Devi
title_full When West Meets East in E. M. Forster’s Hill of Devi
title_fullStr When West Meets East in E. M. Forster’s Hill of Devi
title_full_unstemmed When West Meets East in E. M. Forster’s Hill of Devi
title_sort when west meets east in e. m. forster’s hill of devi
publisher Presses Universitaires de la Méditerranée
series Études Britanniques Contemporaines
issn 1168-4917
2271-5444
publishDate 2009-11-01
description The Hill of Devi relates Forster's experience of deterritorialisation in India; in spite of his efforts to adapt to the country, thus making cross-cultural encounters possible, his letters convey a paradoxical sense of belonging and un-belonging. The Hill of Devi reveals a gap between the author’s cultural background, his Englishness which seeps through the narrative frame, theatricality, tongue-in-cheek humour, comedy, and his winks at the reader, and the “queerness” of India. The eurocentric, distorting gaze of the foreign observer, prone to focus on anomaly, reveals a gap between a cultural model or center (Englishness) and what deviates from it, i.e. ex-centricity. India undergoes a paradoxical process of exaggeration and reduction which turns it into a stage or a carnival. Intertextuality (Gilbert and Sullivan, Alice in Wonderland) casts light on reversal, incongruity and blurred boundaries. India in The Hill of Devi is both a cultural, an ideological and an aesthetic construct. The gap between East and West can finally be measured in terms of differing, between perception and representation, writing and editing. India is not a maieutic space but remains a “muddle”. Yet Forster’s encounter with India had a poietic function and he turned it into a mythic and aesthetic representation of otherness in A Passage to India, supported by a political reflection on imperialism.
topic The Hill of Devi
E.M. Forster
belonging
deterritorialisation
eurocentrism
exclusion
url http://journals.openedition.org/ebc/3678
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