Conflict and resistance in Greta Rana's Guests in this country ; A deveolpment Fantasy
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Abstract
This study examines conflict and resistance in Greta Rana's allegorical novel
Guests in This Country: A Development Fantasy from the perspective of Anti-
Orientalist Studies and Subaltern Studies. This study sheds light on the socio-
economic crisis, cultural degeneration, and neo-colonial hegemony inflicted on the
subalterns. Such discrimination and exploitation make subalterns fight against the
dominant elites and continue resisting. Since social and economic status sets the
notion of hierarchy within the society, this qualitative study interrogates the
dichotomy of theory and practice prevalent even in democratic countries.
Surprisingly, the international aid agencies, as guests in Global South, are widening
differences between rich and poor rather than enduring its eradication, and thereby,
they play a proxy role in neo-colonization under the guise of development. They
support the native elites from within the countries. This thesis points out Greta's
presumption on the categorization and domination of people pervading caste, and
class. In addition to this, the conflicts portrayed in the novel can be observed as
resistance to elite domination. Deriving insights from Subaltern Studies and Edward
Said's Orientalism, the study explains the resistance of marginalized communities to
ruling elites.
Keywords: Conflicts, Subalternity, Resistance, Caste discrimination, Untouchability,
Hegemony, Resistance
