Cloning Terror in David Blacker’s A Cause Untrue

Auteurs

Mots-clés :

Littérature sri lankaise anglophone, David Blacker, A Cause Untrue, Guerre civile au Sri Lanka, Terrorisme, Idéologie de la terreur, Fiction post-11 septembre, Biopouvoir

Résumé

Seismologists have scientific tools at their disposal to indicate the magnitude of earthquakes as well as calculate their epicentres. 9/11 ranks high on the Richter scale with its shockwaves felt around the world, particularly in Afghanistan, Pakistan and Iraq which have never fully recovered from their after-effect. While some conspiracy theorists or ‘truthers’ dispute the mainstream account of the 9/11 attacks of 2001 or suggest that the collapse of the Twin Towers was a CIA cover-up, most analysts recognise that 9/11 had a momentous impact on the American psyche and geopolitics. The convulsions and aftershocks of the WTC attack have generated a proliferation of 9/11 literature, films, artworks, and theoretical texts.
My article explores the ramifications between local and global terror in David Blacker’s novel, A Cause Untrue, which is set in the Sri Lankan civil war between the Sinhalese Buddhist majority and the predominantly Hindu Tamil separatists. Using Foucault and Agamben’s concept of biopower and Mbembe’s necropolitics, I argue that State agencies and terrorist networks deploy similar demonisation discourse and use similar strategies to sustain the war and legitimise further acts of terror.

Biographie de l'auteur

Pascal Zinck, Université Sorbonne Paris Nord

Dr Pascal Zinck holds a PhD from Paris IV-La Sorbonne. He is an Associate Professor of English at the Universities of Paris Sorbonne Cité and Paris Ouest-Nanterre. He specialises in postmodernism as well as postcolonial and multicultural critical theory with an emphasis on South Asian diasporic fiction, memory, terror and trauma studies. He has spoken at contemporary literature conferences in Europe, the US and Australia and has published widely on Kazuo Ishiguro (Peter Lang and Cambridge Scholars). He has written articles on postcolonial Sri Lankan and Pakistani fiction.

His current research focuses on war, ethnicity, memory, nationalism and fundamentalism with further articles on the works of Michael Ondaatje, Ambalavener Sivanandan, Romesh Gunesekera, Jean Arasanayagam, Selina Hossain, Mohsin Hamid, Kamila Shamsie, Uzma Aslam Khan and H M. Naqvi.

He is part of an international research team with Dr Stephen Morton and Dr Veronica Thompson exploring cultures of terror and terrorism in South Asian literature and film. He has edited River of my Blood, Selina Hossain’s novel on the Bangladesh liberation war, which is due for publication in 2016.

Téléchargements

Publiée

2015-11-30

Comment citer

Zinck, P. (2015). Cloning Terror in David Blacker’s A Cause Untrue. Leaves, (1), 128–145. Consulté à l’adresse https://revues.u-bordeaux-montaigne.fr/leaves/article/view/50

Numéro

Rubrique

I.2. Répercussions : Impacts idéologiques