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Title: Cereus Blooms At Night


1
Cereus Blooms At Night
  • By Shani Mootoo

2
Outline
  • Shani Mootoo
  • Cereus Blooms at Night
  • Flashback Malas affection toward Ambrose
  • Nameidentitymemory
  • Magic of Nature frangipani, cereus
  • Contradictory feeling
  • The ending

3
Shani Mootoo
  • born in Ireland in 1958 and raised in Trinidad.
  • Moved to Canada at the age of 19.
  • A skilled multimedia artist and filmmaker.
  • Finally acknowledging and naming her experience
    of abuse prompted Mootoo to return to words, and
    write her first collection of short stories.
  • Out on Main Street, published in 1993, is a
    collection of short stories.
  • Cereus Blooms at Night, published in 1996, is her
    first novel.

4
Cereus Blooms at Night
  • Cereus Blooms at Night, Shani Mootoos 1996
    novel, is set in the town of Paradise on the
    imaginary Caribbean island Lantanacamara.
    Colonized by the Shivering Northern Wetlands
    (Vivian M. May 107)
  • In setting the novel on a fictional, nonspecific
    Caribbean island, rather than on Trinidad where
    she grew up, Mootoo follows in the footsteps of
    other Caribbean women writers who have found a
    critical utility in crafting an imaginary space
    from which to remember identities and histories
    differently (Vivian M. May 107).

5
  • At the same time, by naming the town Paradise,
    and focusing much of the novel on the main
    character Malas walled garden within Paradise,
    Mootoo is clearly toying with cliches of the
    Caribbean as a lost Eden, a pastoral idyll
    (Vivian M. May 108).
  • Thus the fact that much of the story takes place
    in a garden in the town of Paradise, with parks
    named such things as El Dorado, suggests a novel
    that is more allegorical in naturea commentary
    on European exploration narratives and the role
    of science and botany in empire (Casteel 2003,
    19, 22), a reflection on the politics of
    sexuality, and an analysis of exile,
    displacement, and diaspora.

6
Malas affection toward Ambrose
  • Because of Ambrose, Mala sees hopes and bright
    side of life. (brightness in darkness)
  • Once, when they were in high school . . .
    Ambrose left a note of his visit in the form of
    a stolen stalk of frangipani . . . She remember
    the frangipani was in unusually full bloom these
    days. It must have been an omen (210).
  • ? frangipani is the sigh for her. Thinking of
    Ambrose makes her endure the painful life.

7
  • She slipped her tongue out of her mouth and
    licked the stew on her face. The taste of garlic
    and anise erased his smell. The stew was indeed
    well seasoned, perhaps the best she had ever
    cooked. She was pleased she had saved some back
    for Ambrose (222-223).
  • Looking forward his visits gave her the strength
    to endure her fathers night-time attacks (226).
  • She thought privately of him . . . and of herself
    as the lady who would one day be rescued by him
    and revealed to all the world as a princess
    stolen by the commoners at birth (226).

8
  • Ambrose E. Mohanty stood like a man . . . For the
    first time in her life Mala felt like a woman, a
    feeling both thrilling and frightening.
  • He had turned into an extraordinarily handsome
    man (212).
  • ? Mala could not bear to look at him and call him
    Ambrose.
  • She is unconfident to call his name, intending to
    keep a distance with him (a kind of respect to
    those superior people) for her, she is not as
    equal as Ambrose.

9
  • Pohpoh, you must call me Ambrose. I am the same
    person you have known since we were children.
    Please accept my present (213).
  • Not Mr. Ambrose. Ambrose alone is fine. You do
    know me. And I only brought it back for you
    because I hold you in the highest esteem and
    wanted to pay my respects to you in the spirit
    that (214)
  • ? It is so touching that Ambrose had not changed
    his mind. He is still the boy, Boyie.

10
  • The present from Ambrose a portable gramophone
  • Does the gramophone connect something with Mala?
  • She pressed her ear to the horn and smiled,
    filling once again with the feeling she had had
    watching her mother and Aunt Lavinia dance (225)
    ? memory about her mother and aunt dancing with
    the music.
  • Gramophone ? record the voice as memory.

11
Magic of Nature
  • Nature gives Mala hopes, power to face the cruel
    reality and makes her back to memory.
  • She remember the frangipani was in unusually full
    bloom these days. It must have been an omen
    (210).
  • Seeing the frangipani ? thinking of Ambrose ?
    feeling warm and sweet in memory.
  • The frangipani ? representation of Ambrose

12
  • Even in the dark night she could see the
    brightness of the frangipani blossoms by the
    fence. Her anxiousness to see Ambrose surprised
    her (211).
  • ? Natural magic frangipani makes her think of
    Ambrose and back to the sweet feeling in her
    memory about Ambrose. Brightness in darkness,
    feeling warm hope in coldness.

13
  • Dizzying scent of cereus http//www.youtube.com/wa
    tch?vZbzi8XydHQc
  • It was one of the brightest moonlit nights . . .
    she witnessed the slow dance of huge, white
    cereus buds . . . the moonlight reflected off the
    blossoms pure whiteness and cast a glow over the
    yard (144).
  • Close to midnight the buds had opened fully. The
    smell in Malas yard drenched the air and flowed
    across town. Neighbours in deep sleep stirred,
    suddenly restless. Some were pried awake but were
    soon pleasantly besotted by the perfume and swept
    back into deep sleep (149).

14
Contradictory feeling
  • Contradiction her affection to tyrant father
    terrible memory of childhood.
  • Complicated feeling of her father and memory
  • Tormented and confused by odd feelings of having
    betrayed for her father. After all, she thought,
    her father had suffered immeasurably when her
    mother left them.
  • ? Think of Ambrose makes her feel she is cruel to
    her wounded father.

15
  • I ent go let nobody tief my woman. No man, no
    woman, no damn body go tief my property again. I
    go kill he, I go kill she, too, if it comes to
    that, I go kill meself, too (238).
  • ? brutality, violence, patriarchy (chauvinism),
    self constructiveness
  • ? strong self destructiveness that is the main
    reason why Mala worries about him. Though she
    hates what her father did to her and Asha, she
    cannot hate this man absolutely cos he is their
    father. It is a kind of complicated and
    contradictory relationship of father and
    daughter. She cannot separate herself from the
    relationship.

16
  • ? Chandins trauma being colonized (attempt to
    forsake his essence to gain more or be equal as
    others) but finally found that his decision leads
    to the tragedy that he does not get more but
    losing his highest esteem thing. Whats worse,
    his legitimate woman finally eloped with his
    beloved woman. He seems to be betrayed by his
    wife, his beloved and the whole society. That is
    why he cannot bear to lose more.

17
  • Asha? Aunt Lavinia? You there? Mama? Boyie?
    she whispered (247).
  • After Ambrose left, she whispered helplessly.
    Those people she called are from her memory? they
    might be the origin of her feeling of warmth and
    sense of security.
  • Though her childhood is not happy, those people
    who made her feel secure lets her recall them
    again when she is frustrated in reality. it is a
    kind of consolation for her to think of the
    memory of childhood.

18
Confusion of self recognition
  • You grow up here and you dont realize almost
    everyone in this place wish they could be
    somebody or something else? That is the story of
    life. . . (258)
  • Not able to understand someone or to be
    understood by someone.
  • I does watch out over the banister and wonder if
    who I see is really what I see (258).
  • self is distorted by others. It is uncertain
    for people to understand it absolutely.

19
The ending
  • Before our visitors arrive I wash her, mildly
    rubbing her skin with frangipani petals from Mr.
    Hectors hedge and pay special attention in
    dressing her (267).
  • On visiting days she wears a garland of snail
    shells about her neck or a crown of wreaths that
    we wove with feathers and the wings of expired
    insects (267).

20
Works Cited
  • Mootoo, Shani. Cereus Blooms at Night. Toronto
    MS, 2002.
  • May, Vivian M. Trauma in Paradise Willful and
    Strategic Ignorance in Cereus Blooms at Night.
    Hypatia. 21 (2006) 107-135.
  • Shani Mootoo. Emory University. Web. 17 May.
    2010. lthttp//www.english.emory.edu/Bahri/Motoo.ht
    mlgt.
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