Anils Ghost: Soundscapes

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Anils Ghost: Soundscapes

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She is a fan of Prince and a quoter of song lyrics. ... So she moved half-dancing into the courtyard, past the skeleton of Sailor. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Anils Ghost: Soundscapes


1
Anils Ghost Soundscapes
2
  • Questions1. Is Anil an interesting
    character?2. What imagery is associated with
    Anil?
  • 3. Is the narrator male or female?
  • While Anil is a strong character, she never
    graduates to compelling. The author constructs
    her with bits of popular culture and vogue. She
    is a fan of Prince and a quoter of song lyrics.
    She is a movie lover, particularly of Westerns.
    She is recovering from an affair with a married
    writer (who isnt?). Why should we miss her at
    books end?
  • Lorna Crozier, Quill Quire, 2000

3
  • How are Ondaatjes soundscapes relevant to the
    novels themes and structures?
  • postmodern ethos
  • characterisationespecially Anil
  • settingEast vs West
  • transcultural interfacecommunication
    miscommunication
  • spatial narrative archaeology of sound

4
Babel
  • LanguagesSpeaking in Sinhala 9, 145Speaking in
    Tamil 23Speaking in English 187
  • Opera
  • Anils ill-fated first marriage is described in
    operatic terms They had been singing their
    fucking arias of romance with limits for too
    long (151).

5
The Sounds of Sri Lanka
  • The dawn comes up like thunder . . . .
    Though it was never abrupt thunder to her. It
    was first of all the noise of chickens ad carts
    and modest morning rain or a man squeakily
    cleaning the windows with newspaper in another
    part of the house (9).
  • In Colombo there was always a racket. Birds,
    lorries, fighting dogs, a kindergartens lesson
    of rote, street salesmenall their sounds entered
    through open windows (140).

6
The Sounds of Sri Lanka
  • In the forest Monastery The forest was so
    still that Anil heard no sounds until she thought
    of listening for them. Then she located the
    noisemakers in the landscape, as if using a sieve
    in water, catching the calls of orioles and
    parrots. . . . For four hundred years the
    unheard throat calls of birds. The hum of some
    medieval bee motoring itself into the air
    (190).
  • That night, long past midnight, Anil could
    still hear the drumming through the rain. It
    paced and choreographed everything. She kept
    waiting for its silence. . . . . The drum
    continued its intricate antiphonal pulse, like
    steps that led them down a stairway to the sea.
    The drumming could stop only when there was a
    name provided for the head. But that night it
    didnt stop (205).

7
The Sounds of America
  • This was an old tradition among the people shed
    worked with in Oklahoma. Toxicologists and
    histologists always insisted on rock and roll
    (146).
  • While in Sri Lanka, Anil recalls or listens to
  • James Taylor, Sleep come from me (133)
  • Van Morrisons Slim Slow Slider (144)
  • Kam, Keep the Peace Made in America (150)
  • Sam Cooke
  • Tom Waits Heigh Ho! (The Dwarfs Marching Song)
    (169)
  • Steve Earle Fearless Heart (169)
  • Bob Marley Coming in from the Cold (182)

8
The Sounds of America
  • Tom WaitsShe went to her room and returned with
    her Walkman and a tape. A little vengeance. She
    put the earphones on his head, switched the
    Walkman on. Tom Waits singing Dig, Dig, Dig,
    from Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs channelled
    itself into his inner brain, and he rose of the
    floor terrified. He was hearing, he must have
    thought, voices of the dead. He reeled, as if
    unable to escape the sounds within him, and
    finally ripped off the wires attached to his
    head (169)

9
  • Heigh Ho! (The Dwarfs' Marching Song) Sung by
    Tom Waits 
  • Well, we dig dig dig
  • Well, we dig in our mine the whole day through
  • Dig dig dig, that is what we like to do
  • And it ain't no trick to get rich quick
  • If you dig dig dig, with a shovel and a pick
  • Dig dig dig, the whole day through
  • Got to dig dig dig, it's what we like to do in
    our mine, in our mine
  • Where a million diamonds shine
  • We got to dig dig dig, from the morning till the
    night
  • Dig dig dig up everything in sight
  • We got to dig dig dig, in our mine, in our mine
  • Dig up diamonds by the score
  • A thousand rubies, sometimes more
  • But we don't know what we are diggin' for, yeah
  • Heigh-ho, heigh-ho
  • It's off to work we go
  • We keep on singing all day long

10
The Sounds of America
  • Steve Earle
  • No one but Steve Earle for her in the worst
    times. There was a thump in her blood, a sexual
    hip in her movement, where she heard any of his
    songs of furious loss. So she moved half-dancing
    into the courtyard, past the skeleton of Sailor.
    It was a clear night and she could leave him
    there (169).

11
  • Steve Earle, Fearless Heart
  • Don't you worry bout what you've been told
  • Cause honey I ain't even close to cold
  • It's kinda soon to fall in love again
  • But sometimes the best that you can do is just
    jump back in
  • I got me a fearless heart
  • Strong enough to get you through the scary part
  • It's been broken many times before
  • A fearless heart just comes back for more
  • Folks'll tell you that I'm just no good
  • But I wouldn't hurt you honey if I could
  • I can't promise this'll work out right
  • But it would kill me darlin' if we didn't even
    try
  • I admit I fall in love a lot
  • But I nearly always give it my best shot
  • I know you must think I'm the reckless kind

12
  • Bob Marley The Wailers, "Coming in from the
    Cold
  • In this life, in this life, in this life,
  • In this, oh sweet lifeWe're (we're coming in
    from the cold)
  • We're coming in (coming in), coming in (coming
    in),
  • coming in (coming in), coming in (coming in),
  • Coming in from the cold.
  • It's you - it's you - it's you
  • I'm talkin' to
  • Well, you (it's you) - you (it's you) - you
  • I'm talking to now.
  • Why do you look so sad and forsaken?
  • When one door is closed, don't you know other is
    open?
  • Would you let the system make you kill your
    brotherman?
  • No, no, no, no, no, no! No, Dread, no!
  • Would you make the system make you kill your
    brotherman?
  • (No, Dread, no!)
  • Would you make the system get on top of your head
    again?

13
  • Bob Marley The Wailers, "Coming in from the
    Cold (cont . . .)
  • It's life (it's life), it's life (it's life),
  • it's life (it's life)it's - wa - well! - coming
    in from the cold!
  • We're coming in (coming in), coming in (coming
    in)
  • -ooh (coming in), hey! (coming in),
  • Coming in from the cold!
  • It's you - you - you I'm talking
  • Well, yes, you, bilyabong! (it's you)
  • ew! - you I'm talking to now.
  • We-e-ell, why do you look so - look so - look so
    sad
  • look so sad and forsaken?
  • Don't you know When one door is closed - when
    one door is closed,many more is open?
  • We-e-e-ell, would you let the system get on top
    of your head again?
  • No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
  • Dread, no!Would you let the system make you kill
    your brotherman?
  • No, Dread, no!
  • We-e-e-ell, would you make the system get on top
    of your head again?
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