Recognising the homely in an unheimlich world : rationality and the uncanny ecosphere
This thesis investigates how the uncanny facilitates an individual’s return to the Real truths of the ecological world and to an affective and authentic self, by forcing them to recognise the problematic nature of their faith in widely accepted rational and scientific ‘realities’, which are often de...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1485152023-03-11T20:15:47Z Recognising the homely in an unheimlich world : rationality and the uncanny ecosphere Lingesh, Dhanya Sim Wai Chew School of Humanities wcsim@ntu.edu.sg Humanities::Literature::English This thesis investigates how the uncanny facilitates an individual’s return to the Real truths of the ecological world and to an affective and authentic self, by forcing them to recognise the problematic nature of their faith in widely accepted rational and scientific ‘realities’, which are often deliberately manipulated or augmented to conceal what is truthfully Real. I argue that this process of recognition and homecoming is evident in Indra Sinha’s Animal’s People (2007) and two of Amitav Ghosh’s novels, The Hungry Tide (2004) and Gun Island (2019). Through the development of a more ecologically-minded strain of reason, these novels prove that a reconnection to the wider nonhuman ecosphere helps individuals surmount humanity’s increasingly ubiquitous sense of loneliness, thus furthering their recognition of place and purpose. I also suggest that romance is a literary tool that not only seizes the reader’s attention but also allows us to appreciate how isolated urbanites are simply lonely souls seeking lost connections to the Real. It does this as an extension of the uncanny, and in the mode of what I have dubbed as the romantic uncanny. Master of Arts 2021-04-28T12:30:19Z 2021-04-28T12:30:19Z 2021 Thesis-Master by Research Lingesh, D. (2021). Recognising the homely in an unheimlich world : rationality and the uncanny ecosphere. Master's thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/148515 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/148515 10.32657/10356/148515 en This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC 4.0). application/pdf Nanyang Technological University |
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Humanities::Literature::English Lingesh, Dhanya Recognising the homely in an unheimlich world : rationality and the uncanny ecosphere |
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This thesis investigates how the uncanny facilitates an individual’s return to the Real truths of the ecological world and to an affective and authentic self, by forcing them to recognise the problematic nature of their faith in widely accepted rational and scientific ‘realities’, which are often deliberately manipulated or augmented to conceal what is truthfully Real. I argue that this process of recognition and homecoming is evident in Indra Sinha’s Animal’s People (2007) and two of Amitav Ghosh’s novels, The Hungry Tide (2004) and Gun Island (2019). Through the development of a more ecologically-minded strain of reason, these novels prove that a reconnection to the wider nonhuman ecosphere helps individuals surmount humanity’s increasingly ubiquitous sense of loneliness, thus furthering their recognition of place and purpose. I also suggest that romance is a literary tool that not only seizes the reader’s attention but also allows us to appreciate how isolated urbanites are simply lonely souls seeking lost connections to the Real. It does this as an extension of the uncanny, and in the mode of what I have dubbed as the romantic uncanny. |
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Sim Wai Chew |
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Sim Wai Chew Lingesh, Dhanya |
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Thesis-Master by Research |
author |
Lingesh, Dhanya |
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Lingesh, Dhanya |
title |
Recognising the homely in an unheimlich world : rationality and the uncanny ecosphere |
title_short |
Recognising the homely in an unheimlich world : rationality and the uncanny ecosphere |
title_full |
Recognising the homely in an unheimlich world : rationality and the uncanny ecosphere |
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Recognising the homely in an unheimlich world : rationality and the uncanny ecosphere |
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Recognising the homely in an unheimlich world : rationality and the uncanny ecosphere |
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recognising the homely in an unheimlich world : rationality and the uncanny ecosphere |
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Nanyang Technological University |
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2021 |
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https://hdl.handle.net/10356/148515 |
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1761781486179057664 |