Dualism and Materialism in Gregory David Roberts’ Shantaram

Gregory David Roberts is a contemporary Australian author who had been involved in several criminal activities and was therefore convicted to prison sentence earlier in his life. In 2003, he published the semi-autobiographical novel Shantaram largely based on his experiences...

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Main Author: Cenk Tan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Mehmet ŞAHİN 2022-03-01
Series:Turkish Academic Research Review
Online Access:https://dergipark.org.tr/tr/doi/10.30622/tarr.1009329
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author Cenk Tan
author_facet Cenk Tan
author_sort Cenk Tan
collection DOAJ
description Gregory David Roberts is a contemporary Australian author who had been involved in several criminal activities and was therefore convicted to prison sentence earlier in his life. In 2003, he published the semi-autobiographical novel Shantaram largely based on his experiences in the Indian city of Bombay. The novel, which became a best-seller around the globe is an astounding account of a westerner’s spiritual voyage in the outskirts of India. Shantaram deals with a great many themes and issues such as ethics, violence and good vs. evil, but the theme which lies at the core of the narrative is the binary opposition between dualism and materialism. While dualism defends the autonomy of the mind/soul over the body, materialism affirms that all living beings are bound to material laws. This article aims to analyse Roberts’ Shantaram through the binary opposition of dualism and materialism, and specifically from a dualistic perspective. As the founder of modern philosophy and dualism, René Descartes’ theories will be applied to the text as opposed to the contrasting philosophy of materialism. In this respect, dualism is compared and contrasted with materialism and physicalism with reference to several influential thinkers who contributed to this thought from Greek antiquity to modern philosophy such as Aristotle, Plato, Lucretius, Kant and George Berkeley. Thus, a Cartesian analysis is implemented to Shantaram in order to expose the dualism emphasised in the subtext of Roberts’ narrative. All in all, the study concludes that Shantaram exhibits depictions of Cartesian dualism through the protagonist’s experiences in the slums of Bombay and determines that dualism overcomes materialism in Roberts’ story as the mind/soul asserts its autonomy over the body and its physical sphere.
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spelling doaj-art-af0e36405bfc44e688ba00b9adfcdec02024-11-20T17:47:22ZengMehmet ŞAHİNTurkish Academic Research Review2602-29232022-03-017131710.30622/tarr.1009329 Dualism and Materialism in Gregory David Roberts’ Shantaram Cenk Tan0https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2451-3612Pamukkale Üniversitesi Gregory David Roberts is a contemporary Australian author who had been involved in several criminal activities and was therefore convicted to prison sentence earlier in his life. In 2003, he published the semi-autobiographical novel Shantaram largely based on his experiences in the Indian city of Bombay. The novel, which became a best-seller around the globe is an astounding account of a westerner’s spiritual voyage in the outskirts of India. Shantaram deals with a great many themes and issues such as ethics, violence and good vs. evil, but the theme which lies at the core of the narrative is the binary opposition between dualism and materialism. While dualism defends the autonomy of the mind/soul over the body, materialism affirms that all living beings are bound to material laws. This article aims to analyse Roberts’ Shantaram through the binary opposition of dualism and materialism, and specifically from a dualistic perspective. As the founder of modern philosophy and dualism, René Descartes’ theories will be applied to the text as opposed to the contrasting philosophy of materialism. In this respect, dualism is compared and contrasted with materialism and physicalism with reference to several influential thinkers who contributed to this thought from Greek antiquity to modern philosophy such as Aristotle, Plato, Lucretius, Kant and George Berkeley. Thus, a Cartesian analysis is implemented to Shantaram in order to expose the dualism emphasised in the subtext of Roberts’ narrative. All in all, the study concludes that Shantaram exhibits depictions of Cartesian dualism through the protagonist’s experiences in the slums of Bombay and determines that dualism overcomes materialism in Roberts’ story as the mind/soul asserts its autonomy over the body and its physical sphere.https://dergipark.org.tr/tr/doi/10.30622/tarr.1009329
spellingShingle Cenk Tan
Dualism and Materialism in Gregory David Roberts’ Shantaram
Turkish Academic Research Review
title Dualism and Materialism in Gregory David Roberts’ Shantaram
title_full Dualism and Materialism in Gregory David Roberts’ Shantaram
title_fullStr Dualism and Materialism in Gregory David Roberts’ Shantaram
title_full_unstemmed Dualism and Materialism in Gregory David Roberts’ Shantaram
title_short Dualism and Materialism in Gregory David Roberts’ Shantaram
title_sort dualism and materialism in gregory david roberts shantaram
url https://dergipark.org.tr/tr/doi/10.30622/tarr.1009329
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