Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Series Editor's Preface
- 1 The Writer, his Contexts and his Themes
- 2 A Writer Situated in a History and in a Place: Ghosh's Non-fiction
- 3 A Tale of Two Riots: The Circle of Reason and The Shadow Lines
- 4 The Ebb and Flow of Peoples across Continents and Generations: In An Antique Land, The Glass Palace, The Hungry Tide
- 5 Subaltern Agency as Fiction or Science: The Calcutta Chromosome
- 6 Beyond the Commonwealth: Amitav Ghosh and Indian Writing in English
- Topics for Discussion
- Bibliography
4 - The Ebb and Flow of Peoples across Continents and Generations: In An Antique Land, The Glass Palace, The Hungry Tide
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 October 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Series Editor's Preface
- 1 The Writer, his Contexts and his Themes
- 2 A Writer Situated in a History and in a Place: Ghosh's Non-fiction
- 3 A Tale of Two Riots: The Circle of Reason and The Shadow Lines
- 4 The Ebb and Flow of Peoples across Continents and Generations: In An Antique Land, The Glass Palace, The Hungry Tide
- 5 Subaltern Agency as Fiction or Science: The Calcutta Chromosome
- 6 Beyond the Commonwealth: Amitav Ghosh and Indian Writing in English
- Topics for Discussion
- Bibliography
Summary
In An Antique Land
It seemed uncanny that I had never known all those years that in defiance of the enforcers of History, a small remnant of Bomma's world had survived, not far from where I had been living.
(In An Antique Land: 342)The Story
Ghosh begins his account in Lataifa, the little Egyptian village where he stationed himself as an Oxford University graduate student in anthropology. Doctor Aly Issa; a professor at the University of Alexandria, has brought Ghosh to the home of Abu-'Ali, and it is there that he rents a room during his stay in Egypt. Ghosh does not especially relish living there, since Abu-'Ali, in his mid-fifties, is a somewhat overbearing small-businessman. In fact, Ghosh describes him as “profoundly unlovable” (23), but recognises him as someone who prompts a rather fearful respect from the villagers. After a while, Dr. Issa arranges for Ghosh to move out of Lataifa to Nashawy, a larger town.
Another of the major players in the village is Shaikh Musa, also in his mid-fifties, who runs a government-subsidised shop for retailing essential commodities at controlled prices. Ahmed and Jabir are his sons; Sakkina, their age, is Shaikh Musa's second wife (as Ghosh awkwardly discovers). She is the daughter of Ustaz (“teacher”) Mustapha; and is Abu-'Ali's great grand-niece. The names begin to proliferate; and the reader begins to experience the disorientation that must have been Ghosh's, as well. As things develop, Mustapha – and a good many other people – seems to be interested in converting Ghosh to Islam.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Amitav GhoshAn Introduction, pp. 83 - 143Publisher: Foundation BooksPrint publication year: 2005