Geographies of the Unseen: Reclaiming Personal Histories Beyond Political Boundaries in Amitav Ghosh’s The Shadow Lines
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.7492/x7hbwp20Keywords:
Amitav Ghosh, The Shadow Lines, borders, memory, nationalism, identityAbstract
From the period of empires to the present, the issue of defining borders and boundaries has raised significant questions regarding religion, language and the culture
of the people within those geographically defined regions. The arbitrary imposition of borders and the construction of a national identity within these spaces have
caused significant disruptions to the lives of the individuals within these territories. Such divisions have led to the fragmentation of human relationships, memories
and shared histories within these territories. Most authors have discussed these issues. However, this paper focuses on Amitav Ghosh’s The Shadow Lines, which
explores how the rigidity of nation-states poses challenges to the lives of common people and how individuals can transcend the divisions imposed upon their
territories. It employs a nonlinear narrative to tell the story from a multitude of different perspectives and reveals that the boundaries that individuals should be
aware of are those within themselves. Ghosh’s novel exposes how memory can be used as a map of the individuals’ understanding of their concept of belonging,
challenging the notion of borders created within the nation’s construction. Furthermore, the novel investigates the histories of the areas that have been obscured
from official records. Through the characters’ journeys from Calcutta to Dhaka to London, Ghosh demonstrates the fluidity of the concept of identity. Moreover,
the riots that occur in Dhaka and Calcutta demonstrate the fractures that exist within a once-cohesive society. The narrator’s journey into the records of his memories
demonstrates the desire of all individuals to explore spaces beyond those defined by the nation’s borders. By including the voices of the forgotten and the displaced
within the borders of nations, Ghosh explores a world that is an alternative to the divisions of borders and where individuals can connect on a deeper level. The
main aims of the paper are to reimagine a world where identities and histories are not confined by cartographic lines but are liberated through empathy and
remembrance.








