![]() ![]() The novel’s invocation of mutiny and tempest is significant not merely in its subject matter but in its literary form, in that the narrative’s formal disruptions could be read as a kind of ‘literary mutiny’ which attempts to conceive of a space of radical political possibility beyond the limits of historiographical or mimetic representation. ![]() It argues that Collen’s narrative use of mutiny recuperates historical antecedents and previous literary representations of mutiny in order to critique contemporary legal apparatuses in light of colonial precedents and to reinvent generic conventions. Staggering demonstrates the subversive power of. This essay traces how colonial and neocolonial subtexts of rebellion and lawlessness constellate an accretion of symbolic and material histories within the novel. Mutiny is a powerful and hypnotic story about the kinship between women and of justice, in all its forms. ![]() In the preface, Collen claims her novel ‘cries out, in rebellion, against the use of repression as the supposed solution to all ills’. ![]() Throughout Lindsey Collen’s Mutiny (2011) mutiny functions as an intertextual, transhistorical metaphorics that links the prison breakout and general strike movement in Mauritius described in the novel’s plot together with wider geographical contexts of shipboard mutiny, colonial insurgency, prison insurrections, labour unrest, and socialist revolution against neocolonial conditions throughout the Indian Ocean. ![]()
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