DOI: 10.18848/2327-0055/cgp/a265 ISSN: 2327-2376

The Quest for the Unfathomable

Alvin Joseph
<p class="ql-align-justify">This article studies Yann Martel’s <em>Life of Pi</em> using ideas from postcolonial cultural studies suggesting that the Pacific Ocean serves as a place where different types of knowing and understanding meet and widely established Western ideas about truth are questioned. Instead of just seeing the book as a story about survival or a religious one, this study places Pi Patel’s trip on the ocean within the context of colonial knowledge, sea power, and the movement of cultures. Using postcolonial theory (Said, Bhabha, and Spivak), trauma studies, and narrative philosophy, the article claims that survival in <em>Life of Pi</em> is physical, ethical, and about knowledge. Pi’s way of telling stories using different perspectives, like having both animal and human stories, is a survival method. It goes against the idea that there should be only one provable truth, which is often pushed by bureaucratic systems. When the Japanese officials insist on one consistent story, it shows how colonial ways of thinking still exist. These ways of thinking value logic and proof over faith, memory, and what things mean to people. By focusing on the mixing of cultures, faith, and multiple stories, Martel’s book supports storytelling as a morally important reaction to trauma and uncertainty. The ocean is not just a passive setting but an active place where knowledge is questioned and reshaped. In the end, the article makes the case that <em>Life of Pi</em> suggests a moral way of understanding truth that is based on humility, using imagination, and accepting different cultures.</p>

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