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The Journal of Commonwealth Literature, Vol. 43, No. 2, 11-28 (2008)
DOI: 10.1177/0021989408091229

"Dishonourably Postnational"? The Politics of Migrancy and Cosmopolitanism in Rohinton Mistry's A Fine Balance

Caroline Herbert

Concordia University, Montreal, Canada

This article explores Rohinton Mistry's novel A Fine Balance (1996), alongside his short story "Lend Me Your Light" (1987), focussing on the tensions between the politically-distanced cosmopolitan migrant and the socially-committed local activist. My readings draw on Radhakrishnan's notion of diasporic "double duty" — of accountability to, rather than irresponsible detachment from, the homeland. Mistry's representations of migrants, I contend, are centrally concerned not only with the necessity, but also the difficulty, of performing such "double duty" through a sustained engagement with India's history and politics. In this light, I argue that Mistry offers representations of migrants whose attempts to distance themselves from local and national politics are revealed as impossible and irresponsible. Moreover, I suggest that Mistry's representations reveal an anxiety over his position as a migrant writer, and his work seems to mobilize writing as a means of avoiding a problematically apolitical detachment from India. Thus, Mistry establishes a tension between his representation of the migrant within his fiction and his negotiation of his own migrant position through his fiction.

Key Words: Mistry • A Fine Balance • "Lend Me Your Light" • Radhakrishnan • migrancy • cosmopolitanism • politics • India


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