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Cereus Blooms at Night

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152:, culminating in their act of making love. Unfortunately, it is that same day that Chandin realizes his daughter's affair and, as a result, abuses and rapes her severely. The next day, when Ambrose returns, there is a confrontation between all three. Ambrose runs away during the conflict, leaving Mala to lock her father's unconscious body in a room downstairs. Part IV of the novel includes the discovery that Ambrose's wife has left him and an explanation by Ambrose to Otoh that murdering her father had driven Mala mad. She attacked Ambrose anytime he tried to visit. Part V provides a sense of resolution to the novel with the discovery of several letters sent from Asha to Mala that were never delivered and the subsequent attempt by Tyler to contact Asha through this book. 141:
then deliver to Mala. During one such delivery, Otoh dared to enter the Mala's yard dressed in his father's old clothes. Mistaking him for Ambrose, Mala dances with him and then takes him inside to show him the long-decaying body of her father. Terrified, he ran away and collapsed on the street outside. When he recounted what he had seen, the police came into Mala's house and investigated. Upon discovery of the body, they arrested her and prepared her for a court visit. However, before the police had a chance to retrieve the body from Mala's house, Otoh decided to make the rather decisive move (especially in comparison to his father) of burning down Mala's house.
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of intimacy. Eventually Chandin also noticed the unusual affection between his wife and Lavinia. He confronted Sarah and announced that he knew about her affair with Lavinia. In hopes of being with each other, Lavinia and Sarah decided to elope together with the children. However Chandin unexpectedly returned home early on the day of the planned escape. In the mist of confusion and screaming, Pohpoh and Asha were left behind with their enraged and demented father.
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like other children but, at night, they lived under the sexual tyranny of their father. Pohpoh had a childhood admirer and friend, whom she called her Boyie. One day, she seduced him in his mother's house but stopped right before sexual intercourse. Back in the nursing home, Mala begins to have visitors, Otoh and his father Ambrose Mohanty. Ambrose was Mala's Boyie.
108:. Growing up, Chandin found himself madly in love with Lavinia, the daughter of the Reverend and, therefore, his "sister." Attractive and beautiful, Lavinia brushed off all attention from boys and remained in the company of one girlfriend, Sarah, who happened to be Indian and the only other girl in the 184:
The book is filled with flash backs and with Mala's story being told in a first person narrative by Tyler, whom himself is struggling with his gender identity that mirror the transformation that Mala undergoes in reclaiming her self-image. The story is broken by time of present and past, just like a
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and encouraging more conversions to Christianity. Sarah gave birth to two daughters, Pohpoh (Mala) and Asha. In the meantime, Lavinia had returned to Paradise with the news that she had broken off her engagement. Lavinia visited Sarah often and one day, Pohpoh caught Lavinia and Sarah in a moment
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At the same time that Mala is reflecting on her quite vivid recollections of Pohpoh, Otoh begins to work up the courage to come see her. His father Ambrose had taken up an almost constant sleep and only awoke once a month to prepare provisions (a source of contention with his wife), which Otoh would
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At the beginning of Part I, Tyler addresses the general audience. His intention for telling the story of Mala is in hopes that the book will eventually reach Asha Ramchandin, Mala's long-lost younger sister. Mala is an aging, notoriously crazy woman suspected of murder. She was ordered to Paradise
28:. The novel recounts the story of an old lady named Mala Ramchandin through the narrative of Tyler, a nurse at Paradise Alms House. Although the setting of the novel (the town of Paradise in the country Lantanacamara) is deliberately left ambiguous, it is thought to be patterned after the island of 136:
Part II of the novel further traces the development of the relationship between Mala and Otoh, a plot line that interweaves with one of Mala's memories of Pohpoh. In the memory, Pohpoh sneaks out of her father's home, enters another house, and returns safely, all the while being “protected” by the
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After the news spread of his wife leaving her with another woman, Chandin gave up his religion, his God, and began to drink heavily. Then one night, he raped Pohpoh, his eldest daughter. Every night he would call one of his daughters into bed with him. During the day, the children went to school
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Part I opens with Mala arriving to Paradise Alms House. She is heavily sedated and kept under physical constraint. All of the nurses are afraid to attend to her because she is rumored to be a murderer. Tyler, being the only male nurse in the nursing home and a subject of gossip and scrutiny for
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Every character in the book has a skeleton in their closets: Mala's abusive and secretive childhood, Chandin's secret passion for Lavinia, Sarah and Lavinia's love affair, the mysterious disappearance of Chandin, Otoh's 'unnoticed' sex transformation, and Tyler's gender identity.
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over social norms can be illustrated through Asha Ramchandin, who is strong enough to leave home and search for a new life. Tyler himself in the end openly expressed his affection with Otoh in front of the judgmental crowd of nurses.
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in three days. Later, Chandin had heard the news that Lavinia was engaged to her distant cousin in Wetlands. Heartbroken yet trying to conceal his feelings, Chandin announced that he was in love with Sarah and wanted to marry her.
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school. When Chandin grew into a fine young man, he decided to confess his love to Lavinia. Lavinia firmly rejected his love and announced that she would be leaving for the Shivering Northern
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Lantanacamara is an alternative social image. It is not tied down by real geographies or maps. Furthermore, it is not limited to the spaces named by colonial rules and mapped by
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cartographers. This paradise known as Lantanacamara is not a known space understood from an African Safari perspective nor conformed to any colonizer's epistemic norms.
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and other flora found throughout the novel, the creolized dialect spoken by the inhabitants of Lantanacamara, and the racial composition of its population (
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field labor from India. At an early age, Chandin became the adopted son of Reverend Thoroughly, a white man, in exchange for his parents’ conversion to
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adult Mala. The memory is rich in detail about the nature that Pohpoh feels, smells, and hears, since the entire time she is covered in darkness.
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Then Tyler begins to tell the story he heard from his Cigarette Smoking Nana about Mala's father, Chandin Ramchandin. Chandin's father was an
81:, is immediately drawn to her. He cares for her and slowly gains her trust. The first sounds that Mala makes are perfect imitations of 268:
May, Vivian M. "Trauma in Paradise: Willful and Strategic Ignorance in Cereus Blooms at Night." Hypatia Vol 21, No 3 (Summer 2006)
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Kyungwon Hong, G. "'A Shared Queerness': Colonialism, Transnationalism, and Sexuality in Shani Mootoo's Cereus Blooms at Night."
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Parts III, IV, and V of the novel are all significantly shorter than the first two sections. Part III provides a
104:. The Reverend also wanted to adopt an Indian child in hope to have closer connection with the Indians in 148:
to the budding romance between Ambrose and Mala after he returned from studying in the Shivering Northern
145: 253:." The Women's Review of Books. Vl. 16, No 8, (May, 1999(, pp11-12 Old CIty Publishing, Inc. < 78: 281:: Willful and Strategic Ignorance in Cereus Blooms at Night." Hypatia Vol 21, No 3 (Summer 2006) 82: 250: 291: 33: 246: 101: 45: 37: 25: 164: 97: 61: 49: 278: 186: 174: 149: 121: 113: 109: 105: 57: 29: 254: 24:(1996) is the first novel published by film-maker, artist, and writer 125: 53: 212:
Mootoo, Shani. 1996. Cereus Blooms at Night. New York: Avon Books.
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Alms House after the judge found her unfit to stand trial.
264: 262: 189:are torn between their present home and past home. 64:, all of which have sizable Indian populations. 235:Non-resident Indian and Person of Indian Origin 245:Yang, June Unjoo. "Cereus Blooms at Night be 8: 223:Meridians: feminism, race, transnationalism 52:society. Other possibilities would include 120:Chandin traveled around paradise with the 205: 7: 255:https://www.jstor.org/stable/4023191 173:The individual assertion of one's 14: 32:, where Mootoo lived as a child. 93:. However, she does not speak. 313:Novels about child sexual abuse 1: 329: 277:May, Vivian M. "Trauma in 16:1996 novel by Shani Mootoo 48:) are all suggestive of 308:Novels by Shani Mootoo 21:Cereus Blooms at Night 303:1996 Canadian novels 298:Postcolonial novels 225:7.1 (2006): 73-103. 89:, and species of 320: 282: 275: 269: 266: 257: 249:, The Pagoda by 243: 237: 232: 226: 219: 213: 210: 161:Imaginary space: 124:, spreading the 77:his alternative 328: 327: 323: 322: 321: 319: 318: 317: 288: 287: 286: 285: 276: 272: 267: 260: 251:Patricia Powell 244: 240: 233: 229: 220: 216: 211: 207: 202: 158: 70: 17: 12: 11: 5: 326: 324: 316: 315: 310: 305: 300: 290: 289: 284: 283: 270: 258: 238: 227: 214: 204: 203: 201: 198: 157: 154: 69: 66: 15: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 325: 314: 311: 309: 306: 304: 301: 299: 296: 295: 293: 280: 274: 271: 265: 263: 259: 256: 252: 248: 242: 239: 236: 231: 228: 224: 218: 215: 209: 206: 199: 197: 194: 190: 188: 183: 179: 176: 172: 168: 166: 162: 155: 153: 151: 147: 142: 138: 134: 130: 127: 123: 118: 115: 111: 107: 103: 99: 94: 92: 88: 84: 80: 74: 67: 65: 63: 59: 55: 51: 47: 43: 39: 35: 31: 27: 23: 22: 273: 247:Shani Mootoo 241: 230: 222: 217: 208: 192: 191: 181: 180: 170: 169: 160: 159: 143: 139: 135: 131: 119: 102:Christianity 95: 75: 71: 68:Plot summary 46:black people 38:white people 26:Shani Mootoo 20: 19: 18: 292:Categories 200:References 185:person in 98:indentured 182:Diaspora: 171:Identity: 146:flashback 79:sexuality 62:Mauritius 50:Caribbean 279:Paradise 193:Secrets: 187:diaspora 175:autonomy 165:Colonial 150:Wetlands 122:Reverend 114:Wetlands 110:seminary 106:Paradise 83:crickets 58:Suriname 30:Trinidad 42:Indians 156:Themes 126:gospel 60:, and 54:Guyana 34:Cereus 91:birds 87:frogs 294:: 261:^ 85:, 56:, 44:, 40:,

Index

Shani Mootoo
Trinidad
Cereus
white people
Indians
black people
Caribbean
Guyana
Suriname
Mauritius
sexuality
crickets
frogs
birds
indentured
Christianity
Paradise
seminary
Wetlands
Reverend
gospel
flashback
Wetlands
Colonial
autonomy
diaspora
Non-resident Indian and Person of Indian Origin
Shani Mootoo
Patricia Powell
https://www.jstor.org/stable/4023191

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