Abstract
The paper critically analyses Kamila Shamsie’s highly political novel Home Fire by juxtaposing the character; Karamat Lone and Parvaiz Pasha as the two extreme viewpoints representing the rise of obsessive ‘Westoxification’ and an ever clinging sticky ‘Fundamentalism’ respectively that pit the Aneeka/Eamonn love affair to the inconsolable destiny of their collateral damage. The paper, taking for granted the most popularly established interpretation of the novel as a present day fictive adaptation of Sophocles’ drama Antigone, advances another dimension of literary interpretation, beyond Antigone, by playing out the concepts of ‘Westoxification’ and ‘Fundamentalism’ as linked with the postcolonial studies by the postcolonial critic Klaus Stierstorfer. The paper marks Shamsie’s novel as a timely overture to the perils of rising Islamophobic ‘Westoxification’ of so called Muslims like Karamat Lone and its devastating effects on innocent people like Aneeka and Eamonn. Shamsie’s fictive depiction of a post-9/11 Britain is essentially of the one that has reeked herself of intolerance and in her installation of extreme safety measures has introduced draconian laws of citizenship that run the greater risk of estranging its innocent citizens to the fading human face of multicultural secular England that once bore the banners of civilization. This research argues that Kamila Shamsie, by portraying the battling trends of obsessive ‘Westoxification’ and an overwhelmingly reclaiming ‘Fundamentalism’ among Pakistani-British diasporics, complicates and confronts the widespread stereotyping single dimensional Islamophobic discursive misrepresentations of PakistaniBritish Muslims voluminously exacerbated post-9/11 and post-7/7 events.

Aamer Shaheen, Sadia Qamar, Dr. Muhammad Islam. (2018) Obsessive ‘Westoxification’ versus the Albatross of Fundamentalism and Love as Collateral Damage in Kamila Shamsie’s Home Fire, Journal of Research ( Humanities), Volume LIV , Issue LIV.
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