Saturday, 6 April 2013

Theme of Imperialism in Waiting for Barbarians



Name :- Rathod Zindagi V.
Roll no. 13
Sem. –IV
Year -2012-13

Sub. To. – Dr. Dilip Barad
Dept. of English
Maharaja Shri Krishnakumarsinhji Bha. Uni.
Bhavnagar

Paper:- The African Literature
Topic:-
Theme of Imperialism in Waiting for Barbarians

What is Imperialism:- 

A system in which one country extends its power and influence by defeating other countries in war, forming colonies, etc.
J.M. Coetzee’s Waiting for the Barbarians is an exploration of a horrific world of oppression, torture, callousness, and human suffering. The novel takes place in a settlement at an unspecified time in an unspecified country in which colonizers and natives have lived for several decades. A Magistrate rules the colony and has lived peacefully with both groups for years. As the novel begins , Colonel Joll, a representatives of the Empire, arrives, spreading fear among the settlers by telling them the natives present a great threat. Colonel Joll’s arrival disrupts the peaceful colony and creates an atmosphere of suspicion and conflict. The settlers and natives, who had coexisted peacefully before, now find themselves pitted against each other. While the Empire deems the natives “barbarous,” in fact it is the Empire itself that becomes increasingly barbarous as the novel progresses, losing all regard for human dignity, spirit, and respect. The quality deemed most odious in the Barbarians – savagery in its many forms – is amply displayed by the actions and attitudes of the Empire’s men.
The Barbarians are a threatening and potentially   rebellious presence in the eyes of the  Empire. While Joll believes the natives must be held down to prevent an invasion of the Empire’s settlement, the action of the novel makes it clear that it is the Empire itself, which is the invasive, alien force. The natives, called Barbarians by the invaders, in warding off the Imperial troops, stand to lose the most: their identity, their land, their freedom. In efforts to defeat the Barbarians, Colonel Joll and his soldiers burn all the trees by the town’s river in an attempt to destroy anything the natives could use as cover or camouflage. By doing this, they kill untold numbers of animals not quick enough to escape the blaze. The fire also causes the soil along the shore to erode and facilitates the expansion of the desert. The so-called “civilized” soldiers of the Empire are not just battling the natives; they are waging a war against the land itself. The Imperials fail to see the irony of their situation as invaders in the homeland of the Barbarians. They fail to recognize themselves as foreign, and instead assume their superiority, legitimacy, and indisputable right over the natives and the land the natives inhabit.

    Throughout the novel, the qualities that have been attributed to the Barbarians by the Imperials—immorality, filthiness and stupidity, in particular—can be seen as qualities possessed by the Imperials themselves. For example, Joll does not heed the Magistrate’s strenuous warnings against the capture of harmless prisoners from a fishing village, and his ignorance leads to the embarrassing and violent defeat of the foolhardy expedition. Still, Colonel Joll comes rolling back in his carriage from his philistine journey; he never listens and never learns from his errors. Similarly, the squalid living conditions of the natives are shown to be a result of their subjugation. When the first large group of natives is captured and imprisoned by Colonel Joll, they let their waste pile up in the corner of the yard and have to be told to bury it. When one of their babies dies, the mother keeps it under the blanket with her. However, once the Magistrate is imprisoned for helping the woman he loves escape, we see that he too is not allowed to cleanse himself, his clothes, or his room--even of human waste. These conditions become normalized to such a degree that, even when he is released from prison, he has to be forced to clean himself and put on clothes. By being treated as a Barbarian, the Magistrate himself loses the qualities attributed to “civilized” people.

    The most decisively “barbarous” characteristic of the Empire is its rampant immorality, matched only by savage brutality. The imprisonment and interrogation process that the author describes includes beatings, various forms of hanging, starvation, as well as deprivation, isolation, and public humiliation of prisoners.

1 comment:

  1. "Waiting for Barbarians" is my favourite novel, actually the entire paper of African Literature contains best of the best literary pieces.

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