Ethical Gray Zone in War Writings: Reading Ondaatje, Collins and Adichie

Date
2015
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Central Department of English
Abstract
This research looks into Ondaatje’s Anil’s Ghost; Adichie’s Half of a Yellow Sun and Collins’s The Curse of Caste from the perspective of how ethics, empathy and humanity fade during war, crime against humanity, genocidal violence and racist practice. The sphere of ethics and humanity is invaded by the impact of brutality, war, terror and other callous practice. This issue is probed from the perspective of Emmanuel Levinas’s theory of self and the other and the notion of self’s ethical responsibility to the other. Agamben’s theory of the ethics of testimony is also a strong framework from which the erosion of ethics is probed in this text. In Anil’s Ghost, the government is found involved in the clandestine activity of killing innocent civilians without any fault of their own. The involvement of country Sri Lanka in crime against humanity and the blatant violation of Geneva Convention keep at bay even the minimum possibility of exercising ethical and humanitarian concern. In Adichie’s Half of a Yellow Sun, the butchering and slaughtering of Nigerian tribes is indicative of how alien and odd the ethical and empathetic concern is. Olanna feels drawn towards the cause of politics. But when she gets bogged down on the conflict and chaos, she becomes aware of how insecure and fragile her position is. Olanna witnesses the disastrous end of her sister. There is nobody to exercise a grain of sympathy. Her murder mocks any exercise of ethics and humanity. Lina’s condition in The Curse of Caste is almost similar. She died in an atmosphere of the extreme poverty of ethics and humanity. Except Juno there is almost nobody to look at her affectionately. The dearth of ethics and humanity underpins the narrative of Collins.  
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Keywords
Writing, Culture
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