Cloud of unknowing, tower of silk : narratives of the noumenal in the harmony silk factory

Much has been made about the polyphonic narrative structure of Tash Aw’s debut novel, The Harmony Silk Factory. While critics such as Mukherjee have praised the “lucid, uncluttered, beautiful” quality of his prose (“The Harmony Silk Factory by Tash Aw”, Mukherjee), the lacuna the three unreliable na...

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Main Author: Wee, Samuel Ting Han
Other Authors: Cornelius Anthony Murphy
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2015
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/65613
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-656132019-12-10T11:29:21Z Cloud of unknowing, tower of silk : narratives of the noumenal in the harmony silk factory Wee, Samuel Ting Han Cornelius Anthony Murphy School of Humanities and Social Sciences DRNTU::Humanities::Literature::English Much has been made about the polyphonic narrative structure of Tash Aw’s debut novel, The Harmony Silk Factory. While critics such as Mukherjee have praised the “lucid, uncluttered, beautiful” quality of his prose (“The Harmony Silk Factory by Tash Aw”, Mukherjee), the lacuna the three unreliable narrators create have left them more ambivalent, with Hickling lamenting the “obfuscations and contradictions…of the book’s maddening inconsistency” (“Tropes of Silk,” Hickling). While these critics argue that Aw merely borrows techniques innovated by the Modernists without “show[ing] us something startlingly new” (Mukherjee), postcolonialists have championed and defended the text by countering that this particular manner of emplotting “English life in the colonies” has specific implications for “post-colonial literary writing” (Barta 109-112); in the Malaysian context, Sim believes that these formal characteristics allow Aw to interrogate the complex racial-historical dynamics of the nation (302). Lost in the discussion, however, seems to be a close examination of what it is Harmony actually does—what are these formal traits that provoke such contention and accusations of derivativity, and if Aw’s postcolonial narrative is truly as sub-versive as suggested, how does the novel’s narrative structure support or complicate these theses, and frame the thematic problem of knowledge in a post-Empire universe? This paper will therefore examine the architecture of The Harmony Silk Factory through the lens of narrative theory. Specifically, I make frequent reference to Genette’s seminal work Narrative Discourse: An Essay in Method for its useful concepts viz. point of view, perspective, focalization, the diegetic status of narrators and the experience of narrative time through ellipses; these concepts have been invaluable in revealing how the form of Harmony is imbricated into its content. I also employ Dorrit Cohn’s work on the distinction of fiction as a way of examining the hints Aw drops through the text that gesture to its metafictional qualities. I have borrowed Sontag’s ideas regarding the implications of textual interpretation here as well, in arguing for the text’s awareness and anticipation of potential interpretative frames, and also use them to examine the phenomenological relations between the narrator-characters. Lastly, Peter Barta’s paper on the polyphonic parallaxes and the central lacuna-void of Harmony, as well as his illuminating interview with Aw, have been invaluable. Bachelor of Arts 2015-11-19T08:19:14Z 2015-11-19T08:19:14Z 2015 2015 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/65613 en Nanyang Technological University 39 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Humanities::Literature::English
spellingShingle DRNTU::Humanities::Literature::English
Wee, Samuel Ting Han
Cloud of unknowing, tower of silk : narratives of the noumenal in the harmony silk factory
description Much has been made about the polyphonic narrative structure of Tash Aw’s debut novel, The Harmony Silk Factory. While critics such as Mukherjee have praised the “lucid, uncluttered, beautiful” quality of his prose (“The Harmony Silk Factory by Tash Aw”, Mukherjee), the lacuna the three unreliable narrators create have left them more ambivalent, with Hickling lamenting the “obfuscations and contradictions…of the book’s maddening inconsistency” (“Tropes of Silk,” Hickling). While these critics argue that Aw merely borrows techniques innovated by the Modernists without “show[ing] us something startlingly new” (Mukherjee), postcolonialists have championed and defended the text by countering that this particular manner of emplotting “English life in the colonies” has specific implications for “post-colonial literary writing” (Barta 109-112); in the Malaysian context, Sim believes that these formal characteristics allow Aw to interrogate the complex racial-historical dynamics of the nation (302). Lost in the discussion, however, seems to be a close examination of what it is Harmony actually does—what are these formal traits that provoke such contention and accusations of derivativity, and if Aw’s postcolonial narrative is truly as sub-versive as suggested, how does the novel’s narrative structure support or complicate these theses, and frame the thematic problem of knowledge in a post-Empire universe? This paper will therefore examine the architecture of The Harmony Silk Factory through the lens of narrative theory. Specifically, I make frequent reference to Genette’s seminal work Narrative Discourse: An Essay in Method for its useful concepts viz. point of view, perspective, focalization, the diegetic status of narrators and the experience of narrative time through ellipses; these concepts have been invaluable in revealing how the form of Harmony is imbricated into its content. I also employ Dorrit Cohn’s work on the distinction of fiction as a way of examining the hints Aw drops through the text that gesture to its metafictional qualities. I have borrowed Sontag’s ideas regarding the implications of textual interpretation here as well, in arguing for the text’s awareness and anticipation of potential interpretative frames, and also use them to examine the phenomenological relations between the narrator-characters. Lastly, Peter Barta’s paper on the polyphonic parallaxes and the central lacuna-void of Harmony, as well as his illuminating interview with Aw, have been invaluable.
author2 Cornelius Anthony Murphy
author_facet Cornelius Anthony Murphy
Wee, Samuel Ting Han
format Final Year Project
author Wee, Samuel Ting Han
author_sort Wee, Samuel Ting Han
title Cloud of unknowing, tower of silk : narratives of the noumenal in the harmony silk factory
title_short Cloud of unknowing, tower of silk : narratives of the noumenal in the harmony silk factory
title_full Cloud of unknowing, tower of silk : narratives of the noumenal in the harmony silk factory
title_fullStr Cloud of unknowing, tower of silk : narratives of the noumenal in the harmony silk factory
title_full_unstemmed Cloud of unknowing, tower of silk : narratives of the noumenal in the harmony silk factory
title_sort cloud of unknowing, tower of silk : narratives of the noumenal in the harmony silk factory
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/65613
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