Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://repository.kln.ac.lk/handle/123456789/8087
Title: A critical reading of the novel, Mama Raththriya Wemi (I am the night): A blend of Tolstoyan and Dosteovskian identities of the novel
Authors: Ranasinha, C.
Keywords: Tolstoyan and Dosteovskian identities, Genre, Sinhala novel, Philosophical discourses
Issue Date: 2011
Publisher: University of Kelaniya
Citation: Ranasinha, Chinthaka, 2011. A critical reading of the novel, Mama Raththriya Wemi (I am the night): A blend of Tolstoyan and Dosteovskian identities of the novel, Proceedings of the Annual Research Symposium 2011, Faculty of Graduate Studies, University of Kelaniya, pp 134.
Abstract: The novel as a literacy genre mainly splits its identity into two, namely Tolstoyan and Dosteovskian identities. Tolstoyan identity refers to story–telling, explicating of incidents, events, setting, etc. with rich textual admirations. Dosteovskian way of weaving of the story generally includes conversations and vast pieces on sentimental expressions and reveals internal voices of characters and does not pay much attention to settings and atmosphere. Both these identities comply with the generic identity of the novel with settings, point of views, styles, diction, and characterization, the integral parts of the texts and postulate them more or less in them. Tolstoy dominates several elements and Dosteovsky does in some others, because they present distinctive insights and particular philosophies. This paper theoretically focuses on the two identities in critically reading the Sinhala novel, Mama Raththriya Wemi by Hemerathna Liyanaracchi. The story of Mama Raththriya Wemi is a well-organized narrative with many poignant events and complex character development. Sapumal Bandara, the protagonist, a mathematics teacher of a Maha Vidyalaya near Colombo considers himself as a monkey because of his disfigured face and suffers his entire life with this mental agony. Having lost his chance to be an engineer, he joins a Maha Vidyalya as a teacher and falls in love with a very young girl student in his school who also stays in his boarding place. The novel ends with a tragic act of suicide by the protagonist while the last chapter depicts his madness in highly imaginative and also symbolic and figurative language. The novel is also significant for its narration, which finds confluences of Western and Eastern philosophical discourses referring mainly to the Buddha and Fredrick Neitsche.
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http://repository.kln.ac.lk/handle/123456789/8087
Appears in Collections:ARS - 2011

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