Life Of Pi Research Paper

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Yan Martel’s novel, Life of Pi, was published in 2001 and instantly became a smashing hit. Martel, a Canadian novelist and a short story writer, became a best-selling author, as the book won Britain’s prestigious Man Booker Prize for fiction a year later. In his critical review of the prize winning novel, James Wood comments: “Life of Pi is proud to be a delegate for magic realism... In a proper paradox, this magical story is made plausible, and vivid and dramatic, only by the careful application of conventional realist techniques” (London Review of Books, 2002). Moreover, in 2012, Life of Pi was also successfully adapted for the silver screen, winning great critical acclaim (French, The Observer, 2012). The novel records the marvellous journey of Pi Patel, an Indian teenager who is stranded in the middle of the ocean with a hyena, a zebra, an orang-utan and a Bengali tiger by the name of Richard Parker. In his creation of such an incredible story, Martel resorts to a complicated meta-fictional frame narrative that induces his readers to suspend their disbelief, in order to savour the mind’s magical ability to deal with the most odd circumstances. …show more content…

This third novel of Martel follows the track of a long tradition of remarkable literary texts like Robinson Crusoe, Moby Dick and ‘The Ancient Mariner’, of heroes surviving an ordeal at sea, of the shipwrecked castaway. However, this paper seeks to explore how Martel’s Life of Pi transcends the conventional castaway story as it urges readers to re-vision human-animal relations away from the dominant anthropomorphic perspective, offering “a radical decentring of human-centred storytelling” (Stephens,

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