Advertisement
X

A Shape-Shifting Novel Which Reveals Identity And Nationalism To Be In A Flux

In this shape-shifting novel with a gallery of characters who don바카라t fit in fully, old certitudes like identity and nationalism are revealed to be in a flux

C.P. Surendran바카라s One Love, and the Many Lives of Osip B. captures the chaos of change바카라both within individuals and in the nation. As we enter the world of Osip Bala Krishnan, we are caught in a web of narratives that take us through the eve­ry­day life of a young man and his disturbed psychological world. His inner turmoil, caused by the inability to dist­inguish the real from the imagined, is reflected in the society around him as well. We flow with multiple mom­ents of 바카라becomings바카라 that changes peo­ple, relationships and value systems.

Communism slips into Stalinism and dreams of secularism realign into the rigid shape of majoritarianism. Justice is often hijacked by the value system of the mob and soc­ial media platforms become spaces where people are accu­sed and punished. The hills, the cities in the north, Kerala, UK and Russia figure prominently. Kashmir becomes a rebel space of the mind. 바카라I travelled to Kashmir, my Spanish Republic, fought another바카라s battle, for ano­ther바카라s freedom....,바카라 muses Osip.

We first meet Osip when he is 18, a student at a boarding school in Kasauli. An orphan, he was adopted by Niranjan Menon, a communist from Kerala. He names the boy after Russian poet Osip Mandelstam, whom Stalin persecuted and exiled to Siberia, where he died of starvation in 1938. The name suggests that the erstwhile USSR casts a long shadow on the story.  

Osip falls in love with his English teacher Elizabeth. Uncomfortable at having had sex with her student, Elizabeth leaves for England and the novel follows Osip as he pursues her. The changes that have come over India are portrayed with biting sarcasm, but as one is eased into the narrative, one finds that taking sides or being politically correct is not easy. Kerala has taught Osip that one ideology can바카라t be countered with another. 바카라My grandfather was a great Communist leader in Kerala바카라a state, as imaginary as it is real, where the revolution was always about to happen, but did not, at the last minute, so it can happen...again.바카라

The idea of 바카라India바카라 is in perennial flux and as the writer Arjun Bedi, Osip바카라s reluctant mentor, says, 바카라India looks forward to its past바카라. Anand, Osip바카라s friend, decides to cash in on the moment and reinvents himself as a successful godman.

The young journalist duo Dev and Diya pursue Arjun, trying to fix charges of sexual exploitation on him. But they are more caricatures. The novel is dedicated to 바카라The victims and their victims바카라, foreclosing any possibility of fixed codes of right and wrong. As Arjun states with echoes of Thomas Becket, 바카라So, I ebb and eddy toward my exilic status, which I console myself is an essential stage of a writer바카라s evolution, but바카라even this thought could be an assuagement of my vanity바카라.

Media baron Alok Jain, in whose newspaper Osip finds a job, is a ruthless manufacturer of news. As a journalist, Osip finds that reality is what a billionaire can order to his will. Strident debates on night-time television is a background score, with a voice accusing people of anti-nationalism and corruption. Surendran바카라s experience in the newsroom is visible in the vivid descriptions.

Advertisement

As Osip바카라s grandfather바카라s health deteriorates, his wife Gloria builds her image strategically, blending communism with feminism, without believing in any of it. If her husband had been actively involved in the cause and lost himself in it, Gloria is a canny player.

Another character, Idris Abbottabad, 바카라is a part-time thief.... Used to pass off as a train attendant바카라he is part-time everything바카라. Idiris who changes his religion, his past and his identity in his pursuit of survival, best captures the ethos of the narrative.

The novel reminds us that identity, nat­ionality and beliefs are never fixed. We keep moving towards it, half knowing that we will never get there.

(This appeared in the print edition as "Liminal Spaces, Liminal Lives")

Show comments
KR