Motif of discrimination in Julian Barnes's novel History of the World in 10 ½ Chapters
Keywords:
дискриминација, Бог, Ноје, Арка, исти, нечисти, необјективна селекцијаAbstract
In this paper we analyse the main motif of Barnes’s History of the World in 10 ½ Chapters - motif of the division between „the clean“ and „the unclean“ .Each chapter of this novel describes some kind of reincarnation and variation of the eternal human need for discrimination – from the ironic account of the biblical creation of the world, to the shameful episode of human history dating from just prior to the outbreak of the Second World War in which many of the world’s free countries refused to allow Jewish refugees to disembark, to the satirical fantasy of heaven as a collective projection of the twentieth psyche. So at the end Barnes „forces“ us o conclude that a world in which no one is discriminated against is merely a dream of what we imagine we want but would actually find intolerably innocuous and tedious.
References
– Buxton, Jackie. „Julian Barnes’s Theses on History (in 10 ½ Chapters)“. Contemporary Literature. Volume 41. Number 1. Spring, 2000. 56-86.
– Eder, Richard. „Of Noah and the Worm“. Los Angeles Times Book Review. October 15, 1989. 3.
– Oates, Joyce Carol. „But Noah was not a Nice Man.“ The New York Times Book Review. Vol. 94. October 1, 1989. 12-13.
– Stuart, Alexander. „A Talk With Julian Barnes.“ Los Angeles Times Book Review. October 15, 1989, 15.
– Свето писмо старог и новог завјета. Британско и Инострано Библијско Друштво Београд, 1990. 6.