Creating Meaning out of Dirt: Rituals, Taboos and the Abject in Anuk Arudpragasam’s The Story of a Brief Marriage

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Contributors

Abstract

Anuk Arudpragasam’s The Story of a Brief Marriage (2016) imaginatively recreates the last stage of Sri Lanka’s Civil War by chronicling a single day in the life of a young Tamil man in a refugee camp in the No Fire Zone. The novel’s graphic and disturbing memorialization of the violence of the war zone is powerful; as such, humanity and hope seem impossible. However, this seemingly impossible hope is precisely what this chapter focuses on by asking what solutions or ‘alternatives’ The Story of a Brief Marriage, albeit ever so tentatively, offers to war, trauma, and the loss of humanity in conditions of debilitating violence and extreme disruption. The chapter analyses how the protagonist navigates the impossible conditions of a ‘state of exception’ and ‘bare life’ and how, functionalizing the ‘abject’, he resorts to rituals to sustain his humanity and make meaning out of the nothingness he is reduced to. We argue that, in rendering the disavowed, the forcefully repressed, the unnamable and the unthinkable visible and present in the cultural imaginary, the novel offers its readers a possibility of renewal through cleansing by forcing them to acknowledge, take responsibility for and work through the horror of the (national) past.

Details

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationContemporary Sri Lankan Literature and Art
EditorsStefan Horlacher, Thilini Nisansala Kumari Meegaswatta
Place of PublicationLondon/New York
PublisherRoutledge India
Pages271 - 288
Number of pages18
ISBN (electronic)9781003603498
ISBN (print)9781032479170
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - Nov 2025
Peer-reviewedYes

External IDs

ORCID /0000-0001-8960-0296/work/215832715
Scopus 105023240985

Keywords