Ideology of Politics in Aravind Adiga’s The White Tiger

Arti Gupta

Abstract


Aravind Adiga’s The White Tiger (2008) can easily be placed in the gamut of Cultural Studies since it shares most of the features of this school. For example, it can easily be analyzed as a form of cultural resistance to homogenizing capitalism, as the emphasis throughout is on the particularities of the proletariat suppressed under the dominant high culture. But what strikes one as odd is that this particular class has been undermined in the text to such an extent that the writer not only fails to redefine the social order but also ends up as a spokesperson of the conventional Eurocentric perspective of the East to the extent that it has led literary critics to debate how far he fits a Western cosmopolitan model of writing. This article, therefore, attempts to unravel these diametrically opposite strands in the fabric of The White Tiger as Adiga while silencing certain voices ends up allowing the narcissism of the Western culture raise its garrulous head. 


Keywords


Cultural studies, Economic exploitation, Cultural ethos, Orientalist thought, Counter-hegemonic culture, Class conflicts.

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References


Adiga A. The White Tiger. India: Harper Collins, 2008. 2. Kapur A. New York Times. Review. 9 Nov 2008. Web. 4 Feb 2014. Print. 3. Said EW. Culture and Imperialism. New York: Vintage, 1993.


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