Author/Authors :
Ramachandran ، Indrani نويسنده , , Noor ، Rohimmi نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Acknowledged as one of the world’s finest writers in the English language, V.S. Naipaul’s cynicism has, over
the decades, come to represent his very identity as a writer, so much so that any discussion about Naipaul’s
brilliance as a writer almost always finds itself addressing his penchant for controversies that conspicuously
come across in almost all his written works. This paper will explore such a negative stance taken by V.S.
Naipaul towards Third World countries and people, namely Trinidad and Africa, as featured in his two works of
fiction, The Mystic Masseur and A Bend in the River and, in the process, attempt to understand the reasons behind
his doing so. Through the application of the concept of Nihilism, this paper shows that people in the two
countries in question have an inherent sense of futility in them, and that Naipaul’s portrayal of them in a negative
light is indeed based on these realities that he saw and experienced.