[ilds] An Indian View of an Indian View: Durrell’s India
Denise Tart & David Green
dtart at bigpond.net.au
Tue Nov 17 21:46:30 PST 2015
James, good point there. He was not made to leave France. Suspect he would have stayed on Cyprus had be not been forced out, but he could have gone back. No, Claude was French, so France it was and I do think he liked southern France, the climate, the wine the people. Of course , he liked the French approach to art and life and his works were popular there. I think by the time Durrell got out of Cyprus, he had had enough of being an exile, a displaced person. So now I am coming to my negative feeling and his own negative feelings about the vampire house in sommieres - just couldn't be bothered moving and he had the bottle for company.
David
Sent from my iPad
> On 18 Nov 2015, at 4:02 pm, James Gifford <james.d.gifford at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> Good points on all sides... He spoke of India often in interviews -- there's a fascinating one with Lyn Goldman in which she calls him on it (they laugh it off, both knowing what it really was). India's also there in the Quintet, "From the Elephant's Back," and right at the very beginning in /Pied Piper of Lovers/ (his most autobiographical novel).
>
> Rather than being reluctant to return, either because he didn't know anyone in India anymore or because his British work might create trouble, I'd suggest something a bit more uneasy -- maybe Durrell didn't like travel? How often did he move to new places because he wanted to rather than needed to?
>
> There's also the real possibility that he knew the India of his memories wasn't real. How many of us know the same thing about our own childhoods, no matter where we spent them? Going back would make him confront that unreality... There's something akin to this in his story "Oil for the Saint; Return to Corfu."
>
> For David's point, was France his favorite place, or just the first one he wasn't made to leave?
>
> There's also that matter of his non-patrial status as a British subject. When the British immigration act went through amendments in the 1960s, like so many of those from the West Indies, India, & Pakistan, he became a non-patrial.
>
> All best,
> James
>
>> On 2015-11-17 6:51 PM, Kennedy Gammage wrote:
>> Did he have any close friends there?
>>
>> Cheers - Ken
>>
>> On Tue, Nov 17, 2015 at 5:52 PM, sharbani banerjee(mukherjee)
>> <sharbanibm at gmail.com <mailto:sharbanibm at gmail.com>> wrote:
>>
>> David has a point there. With the British Raj ending in 1947. and
>> Durrell being an employee of the British High Commission....it could
>> have been a deterrent.
>> Best
>> Sharbani
>>
>> On 18-Nov-2015 1:48 am, "Denise Tart & David Green"
>> <dtart at bigpond.net.au <mailto:dtart at bigpond.net.au>> wrote:
>>
>> It is interesting then that Durrell never went back to India.
>> Are there theories, scholarly or otherwise about this? Was a
>> Tibet of the mind enough?did Indian independence have anything
>> to do with it?
>>
>> David.
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