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7 - Home and nation in Margaret Atwood’s later fiction

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 November 2006

Coral Ann Howells
Affiliation:
University of Reading
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Summary

“No place like home”

My opening phrase, taken from The Blind Assassin is, in its turn, a well-known quotation from The Wizard of Oz. In Atwood's novel, it relates to an episode from the Chase sisters' adolescence, where it is irreverent, odd, loony Laura who rewrites the sentence she heard many times from Reenie, the family housekeeper, whose language floods over with common sense, folk sayings, and popular wisdom. Laura's rewriting of “There's no place like home” - a stupid statement in her opinion - goes like this: “She wrote it out as an equation. No place = home. Therefore, home = no place. Therefore home does not exist.” The Blind Assassin destabilizes received notions of home, with their conventional meanings of comfort, security, and custom. The Chase family estate - Avilion - acts as a refuge for the whole family; it functions as a bastion to keep the world outside at bay. In this novel, however, homes are also represented as provisional; they are unstable entities, like the patrimony of the Chase family. The sense of security, stability, and reassurance that Avilion has provided for Iris and Laura crumbles at one point in the narrative. Such a precarious figuration of home parallels the representation of nation and issues of national identity. Contemporary Canada, seen through Iris's eyes, appears, much to her astonishment, an odd assortment, a multicultural mosaic of ethnicities and languages with an elusive identity, which for people of Iris's generation and background comes very much as a surprise. Crucial also in this novel is the presence of an outsider, here embodied by Laura.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2006

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