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This paper aims to justify counter hegemonic effects of hybridity in Paul Scott’s The Raj Quartet from the subaltern perspective. This study explores linguistic, cultural, political and racial hybridization with its counter hegemonic effects upon the colonizers. The cultural contact zone is imbibed in ambivalence according to Homi Bhabha, which differentiates it from the pre-colonial culture. Macaulay’s Minutes of 1835 provide the basics for the creation of hybrid Indians to sustain the British Raj. Following his ideology the British writers as Kipling viewed the British culture and values as a civilizing mission for the natives. It was intended to produce mimic Indians to extend colonialism and annihilate resistance of the natives. But in the Quartet hybridity results in mocking the subjects and consequently acts as a site of resistance and democratic struggle against colonialism. Hence, the colonizers get the opposite of what is intended. Bhabha also holds that imperial ideology is contaminated by hybridity when colonized natives strike back through appropriation of the Western knowledge. The Anglicized Hari becomes a staunch anti-colonialist. Daphne established liaison with Hari and becomes the mother of the hybrid child Pravati. The western educated Kasim’s family struggles for decolonisation. Hence, the Quartet draws upon the agency of the Indians as the subaltern contrary to the stereotypical concepts of the British.

Kifayat Ullah Khan. (2018) Counter Hegemonic Effects of Hybridity in Paul Scott’s The Raj Quartet, Journal of Research ( Humanities), Volume LIV , Issue LIV.
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