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A Flag on the Island, The Mimic Men and The Loss of El Dorado

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V. S. Naipaul

Part of the book series: Macmillan Modern Novelists ((MONO))

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Abstract

A Flag on the Island (1967) brings together short fiction written at various times. ‘My Aunt Gold Teeth’, dated 1954, the earliest of Naipaul’s collected writings, is set in the Hindu heartland of rural Trinidad. Its amusing illustration of the way the community was changing through contact with other cultures also reveals the antagonisms at the heart of social relations; such social comedy as deceptions, feelings of guilt and family recriminations results from giving into the temptation of trying the ways of others. An orthodox Hindu’s wife resorts to Roman Catholic prayers to overcome her barrenness; when her husband, an orthodox pundit, dies her prayers are said to have caused his death and she is cruelly told that she does not deserve to have children to care for her in old age. The aunt’s ignorance of the significance of both the Hindu and Catholic rituals she practises, as well as the various ethnic animosities within the community, look forward to the title story ‘A Flag on the Island’, written (1965) during the time Naipaul was writing The Mimic Men. The two stories and the novel are in part about communal antagonisms and the cultural confusions and mimicry of cultural behaviour that occur when different groups are brought together and society is in a period of change. The title story is also concerned about commitment and the dangers of the Americanization of the West Indies.

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© 1993 Bruce King

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King, B. (1993). A Flag on the Island, The Mimic Men and The Loss of El Dorado. In: V. S. Naipaul. Macmillan Modern Novelists. Palgrave, London. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-22638-2_5

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