“Wine in Old and New Bottles’: Critical Paradigms for Joseph Conrad, “Conrad: Eastern and Western Perspectives, Krajka Wieslaw, Editör, Columbia University Press, New York , Lublin, ss.219-237, 2013
In “The Lagoon,” as Said
observes, Arsat’s reflection upon his past tries to illuminate what has been so
uncomfortably mysterious to him (89). From Bhabha’s viewpoint, Arsat’s odyssey
can best be explained with the help of the terms unhomely and/or uncanny. For
Bhabha, to be unhomed does not necessarily mean to be literally homeless; on
the contrary, the unhomely or uncanny moment can take over you at any moment
stealthily. Although Arsat physically has home, he feels unhomed being exiled
from his familiar surroundings after he betrays his own brother and his Malayan
fellows. He finds himself dominated by this uncanny feeling. Seeing himself in the
eyes of Arsat, who has acted like a colonizer, Tuan, too, notices his uncanny
double in this Malayan man. According to George Panichas, Conrad’s works
“explore and make known what takes place when the physical and metaphysical
regions of intellect and emotion intersect and interconnect” (viii). Both Arsat
and Tuan have faced the unhomely moment seeing their uncanny doubles in each
other. In the end, it becomes evident that the boundaries of the notions of
colonizer and colonized have been blurred uncannily in “The Lagoon.”
In “The Lagoon,” as Said
observes, Arsat’s reflection upon his past tries to illuminate what has been so
uncomfortably mysterious to him (89). From Bhabha’s viewpoint, Arsat’s odyssey
can best be explained with the help of the terms unhomely and/or uncanny. For
Bhabha, to be unhomed does not necessarily mean to be literally homeless; on
the contrary, the unhomely or uncanny moment can take over you at any moment
stealthily. Although Arsat physically has home, he feels unhomed being exiled
from his familiar surroundings after he betrays his own brother and his Malayan
fellows. He finds himself dominated by this uncanny feeling. Seeing himself in the
eyes of Arsat, who has acted like a colonizer, Tuan, too, notices his uncanny
double in this Malayan man. According to George Panichas, Conrad’s works
“explore and make known what takes place when the physical and metaphysical
regions of intellect and emotion intersect and interconnect” (viii). Both Arsat
and Tuan have faced the unhomely moment seeing their uncanny doubles in each
other. In the end, it becomes evident that the boundaries of the notions of
colonizer and colonized have been blurred uncannily in “The Lagoon.”