Journey Through Darkness: The Writing of V.S. NaipaulStudie over het werk van de West-Indische schrijver Vidiadhar Surajprasad Naipaul (9132- ). |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 13
Page 14
... told in Trinidad . " It was a place where the stories were never stories of success but of failure : brilliant men , scholarship winners , who had died young , gone mad , or taken to drink ; cricketers of promise whose careers had been ...
... told in Trinidad . " It was a place where the stories were never stories of success but of failure : brilliant men , scholarship winners , who had died young , gone mad , or taken to drink ; cricketers of promise whose careers had been ...
Page 213
... about 40 , I was told later , who said I was asking too complicated a question . I said I was not asking the question , but responding to the question that had been - put to me " ( CD 14 ) . For At the Heart of Darkness 213.
... about 40 , I was told later , who said I was asking too complicated a question . I said I was not asking the question , but responding to the question that had been - put to me " ( CD 14 ) . For At the Heart of Darkness 213.
Page 238
... told interviewers he seeks to suppress , but with which he seems more comfortable in recent writing . Drawing on many Hindu themes , this novel embodies most clearly the ambivalence and tension bet- ween Naipaul's statements of the ...
... told interviewers he seeks to suppress , but with which he seems more comfortable in recent writing . Drawing on many Hindu themes , this novel embodies most clearly the ambivalence and tension bet- ween Naipaul's statements of the ...
Common terms and phrases
accept achieve African Area of Darkness attempt aware become believe Bend Biswas Biswas's Black Power Bobby chaos characters colonial corruption culture discovers Dorado dream El Dorado English European experience failure fantasy father fear feel Finding the Centre Ganesh George Lamming Guerrillas Hindu House human identity individual Islam island Jimmy Jimmy's journey Knights Companion London Loss Malik metropolis Middle Passage Miguel Street Mimic Mimic Men MimM Miranda Mystic Masseur Naipaul seems Naipaul's fiction Naipaul's writing narrator Negro never nonfiction novel novelist offer past political portrays postcolonial racial Ralegh Ralph Singh readers reality relationship reveals River Roche Salim Santosh satire seeks Seepersad Naipaul sense slave social society Spanish Stone story Suffrage of Elvira suggests theme things tion Trinidad Trinidadian truth Tulsis understanding V. S. Naipaul village violence vision vision of disorder West Indian words Wounded Civilization Yvette