`A second Troy!' Nostos and the poetics of delirium and violence in Derek Walcott's Odyssey

Drawing principally from edouard Glissant's conceptions of detour and delire verbal (verbal delirium) and Frantz Fanon's notion of the physical and psychological salience of violence, this article explores Odysseus' nostos, or homecoming, in Derek Walcott's re-envisioning of the...

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Main Authors: Zargarzadeh, Haleh, Gabriel, Sharmani Patricia
Format: Article
Published: Routledge 2021
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Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/27566/
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spelling my.um.eprints.275662022-06-09T06:23:45Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/27566/ `A second Troy!' Nostos and the poetics of delirium and violence in Derek Walcott's Odyssey Zargarzadeh, Haleh Gabriel, Sharmani Patricia D History (General) P Philology. Linguistics Drawing principally from edouard Glissant's conceptions of detour and delire verbal (verbal delirium) and Frantz Fanon's notion of the physical and psychological salience of violence, this article explores Odysseus' nostos, or homecoming, in Derek Walcott's re-envisioning of the Greek epic poem in The Odyssey: A Stage Version (1993). It examines the alienation experienced by Odysseus on his return to his homeland and the nature of his attempts to reorient himself with `home'. It argues that violence and delirium serve as a poetics that helps Walcott's Odysseus reclaim home from the usurpation of the suitors and achieve nostos. It demonstrates how, through the errant figure of Odysseus and his circuitous journey homeward, Walcott turns the trope of nostos, with its emphasis on disguise and opacity, into a strategy that dismantles the fixed spatial and temporal boundaries between the Old World and the New, coloniser and colonised, putting Ithaca and Homer in dialogue with Walcott and the postcolonial Caribbean. It is hoped that the elucidation of Glissant and Fanon's ideas in the Ithacan context and quest for home will contribute to new conceptions of home and homecoming in Walcott's works and in Caribbean literature as a whole. Routledge 2021-01-02 Article PeerReviewed Zargarzadeh, Haleh and Gabriel, Sharmani Patricia (2021) `A second Troy!' Nostos and the poetics of delirium and violence in Derek Walcott's Odyssey. Postcolonial Studies, 24 (1). pp. 122-138. ISSN 1368-8790, DOI https://doi.org/10.1080/13688790.2020.1712761 <https://doi.org/10.1080/13688790.2020.1712761>. 10.1080/13688790.2020.1712761
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Research Repository
url_provider http://eprints.um.edu.my/
topic D History (General)
P Philology. Linguistics
spellingShingle D History (General)
P Philology. Linguistics
Zargarzadeh, Haleh
Gabriel, Sharmani Patricia
`A second Troy!' Nostos and the poetics of delirium and violence in Derek Walcott's Odyssey
description Drawing principally from edouard Glissant's conceptions of detour and delire verbal (verbal delirium) and Frantz Fanon's notion of the physical and psychological salience of violence, this article explores Odysseus' nostos, or homecoming, in Derek Walcott's re-envisioning of the Greek epic poem in The Odyssey: A Stage Version (1993). It examines the alienation experienced by Odysseus on his return to his homeland and the nature of his attempts to reorient himself with `home'. It argues that violence and delirium serve as a poetics that helps Walcott's Odysseus reclaim home from the usurpation of the suitors and achieve nostos. It demonstrates how, through the errant figure of Odysseus and his circuitous journey homeward, Walcott turns the trope of nostos, with its emphasis on disguise and opacity, into a strategy that dismantles the fixed spatial and temporal boundaries between the Old World and the New, coloniser and colonised, putting Ithaca and Homer in dialogue with Walcott and the postcolonial Caribbean. It is hoped that the elucidation of Glissant and Fanon's ideas in the Ithacan context and quest for home will contribute to new conceptions of home and homecoming in Walcott's works and in Caribbean literature as a whole.
format Article
author Zargarzadeh, Haleh
Gabriel, Sharmani Patricia
author_facet Zargarzadeh, Haleh
Gabriel, Sharmani Patricia
author_sort Zargarzadeh, Haleh
title `A second Troy!' Nostos and the poetics of delirium and violence in Derek Walcott's Odyssey
title_short `A second Troy!' Nostos and the poetics of delirium and violence in Derek Walcott's Odyssey
title_full `A second Troy!' Nostos and the poetics of delirium and violence in Derek Walcott's Odyssey
title_fullStr `A second Troy!' Nostos and the poetics of delirium and violence in Derek Walcott's Odyssey
title_full_unstemmed `A second Troy!' Nostos and the poetics of delirium and violence in Derek Walcott's Odyssey
title_sort `a second troy!' nostos and the poetics of delirium and violence in derek walcott's odyssey
publisher Routledge
publishDate 2021
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/27566/
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score 13.214268