This section contains 5,226 words (approx. 18 pages at 300 words per page) |
SOURCE: Russell, D. W. “The Dislocating Act of Memory: An Analysis of Wilson Harris' Tumatumari.” World Literature Written in English 13, no. 2 (November 1974): 237–49.
In the following essay, Russell examines the major thematic developments in Tumatumari as a complex expression of “the art of memory.”
In describing a new radical art which will go beyond the dead-end realism of the novel, Wilson Harris states “that, in fact, an art of memory which dislocates, in some measure, an idolatrous plane of realism by immersing us in a peculiar kind of ruined fabric, may help to free us from a consensus of bestiality, monolithic helplessness, monolithic violence.”1 Just such an art of memory is used by Harris in Tumatumari in his presentation of the drama of consciousness of Prudence, and the novel becomes a complex act of memory. Although the poetic density of the language and structure of the novel continually shows...
This section contains 5,226 words (approx. 18 pages at 300 words per page) |