Reiki crins: A subaltern character in blacklisted in Bhutan: Love lost and transformed in the land of gross national happiness
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Abstract
This paper explores Reiki Crins as a subaltern character in her memoir Blacklisted in
Bhutan: Love Lost and Love Transformed in the Land of Gross National Happiness in
the light of the subaltern perspective. The memoir revolves around Crins’ journey and
her struggle to motivate and educate the youths of Bhutan, providing job
opportunities and happiness in Tsachaphu village. Oscillating between the
declaration of Bhutan as the world’s happiest country and the real-life experiences of
the Bhutanese, she strives to confront pragmatic problems in the village in which she
plays a significant role in elevating the particular village's condition. However, Crins,
a citizen from the Netherlands, is blacklisted. This research paper, therefore, focusing
on Rieki Crins, deals with the three specific questions: What contradiction does she
confront while visiting Bhutan? Why is she blacklisted despite her good work? And
how is she a subaltern character in her memoir? To answer these questions, this
research employs Antonio Gramsci, Gayatri Chakraborty Spivak’s notion of
‘Subaltern,’ and ‘Ranajit Guha’s concept of ‘Reflective Action.’ The paper claims
that Reiki Crins, indeed, is a subaltern character; however, she takes particular space
as a resistive site, and being within the periphery challenges the structural
domination of the Bhutanese government. Subalterns are the subordinated category of
people in a particular place at a specific time; nevertheless, they are relative and in
continuous flux. Thus, using the flexible position of a subaltern, Crins, challenges the
hegemonic force of the dominant and portrays the self as an agency to the ordinary
people. In this regard, Crins’ memoir is a projection of a subaltern character, who
uses subaltern consciousness to speak for the voiceless.
Keywords: Subaltern, Consciousness, Domination, Resistance and Recognition
