WE all love to read fiction. And many of us have tried our
hands at it. Some are phenomenally successful. Some are just hopeless
storytellers .
Fiction is basically the art of telling lies. The fulcrum
about which the story of a narrative rotates
does not (or hardly)exist. In fact Picasso once went to the extent of telling
us that all art are false.
In his essay entitled ‘The sense of an Ending’, Frank
Kermode defines fiction as ‘something we know does not exist but which help us
to make sense of, and move in the world’. In other words the fictionality of a given narrative is taken for
granted and in fact many a time in our day to day discourse we invent different fictions to help us out of
problem and also to perpetuate the existence of our self-serving interests.
This is also to mean that arguably we need to create fiction for the promotion of a particular idea
and also the person who remains behind that idea.
A case in point is the story of the apple involving Sir
Issac Newton. It is believed that Newton ’s
discovery of gravitation was occasioned by
the fall of an apple when he was sitting in a contemplative mood. But many have
contested the story including the celebrated Science historian I.B.Cohen. Many
argue that the story of the apple is merely an invention by historians with French
writer Voltaire often cited as the chief suspect. J.B.S. Haldane , an outstanding British
Biological Scientist went to the extent of suggesting that ‘the story of the
apple’ was a capitalist propaganda. Nevertheless it is a beautiful story and it
has helped popularise the concept of gravitation and also the man who is behind it. Many hold the view
that such a beautiful story should not be destroyed by a ‘quest for historical
accuracy’.
Even the history that we read as textbooks can border on
fiction. History is basically a ‘personal construct’ as the past we ‘know’ is
always contingent upon our own ‘present’.
Many doubt the existence of
medieval Ahom general Lachit
Borphukan and the narrative in which he murders his own maternal uncle for the
dereliction of his duty. Often it is cited as an example of a story getting
influenced by the killing of Kanch in Krishna narratives.
Nevertheless the ‘story’ has helped keep alive the Assamese
nationalism –a ‘story’which is invoked in time of crisis. A ‘quest for
historical accuracy’ may be ill-advised in this case.
There are many organisations in Assam whose survival litany is the
story of the ‘step-motherly treatment’ meted out to the state by the
centre. But the level of corruption that
the state is steeped in presently and also the astronomical grants( compare it
with other states) that the centre has given to our state lead us to question this
view. Besides should one go by the newspapers’ reports, one is more than
consternated by the amount of money that has gone back unutilised. Nevertheless
it is largely a convenient fiction that guarantees the survival of many
organizations.
Leaky Gut Syndrome is not a recognised medical diagnosis.
Yet lot of fictionalised accounts about the ailment are doing the rounds just
for the sake of selling alternative medicine. Nevertheless this ‘fiction’ is
useful and has helped thrive a business.
Examples abound.
Fiction is a part of that power which eternally desires evil
which eternally desires good.
Reference:
Hopes and Impediments by Chinua Achebe
The Universe by J.P.Mcevoy
Re-thinking History by Keith Jenkin
The history of the siege of Lisbon by Jose Saramago
Reference:
Hopes and Impediments by Chinua Achebe
The Universe by J.P.Mcevoy
Re-thinking History by Keith Jenkin
The history of the siege of Lisbon by Jose Saramago