Authors : Shivaji Methe, Abhijeet Dawle
DOI : 10.5281/zenodo.16928893
Volume : 15
Issue : 2
Year : 2025
Page No : 492-500
Amitav Ghosh’s The Living Mountain (2022) is an eco-fable that uses parabolic storytelling to explore philosophical ideas. It examines how people have become detached from nature and the colonial origins of ecological harm. The story takes the form of a grandmother telling a tale to her grandchildren. In doing so, it gently criticizes the colonial-capitalist ideas that tried to control, categorize, and take resources from the earth, with a focus on mountains, forests, and native knowledge. This paper analyzes The Living Mountain through the lenses of postcolonialism, postmodernism, and cultural studies, with a focus on how the novella articulates a critique of imperial epistemologies and modern technoscientific arrogance. This paper places Ghosh’s story in the context of 21st-century literature, noting its alignment with postmodern ideas through its mixing of genre, history, and storytelling. The Living Mountain also goes back to ideas important in postcolonial theory, like displacement, environmental injustice, and when indigenous people’s voices are ignored. Cultural studies permits analyses of the myths, stories, memories, and forms of opposition present in a grandmother’s tale. The paper draws on key critical thinkers such as Edward Said, Homi Bhabha, Gayatri Spivak, and Arjun Appadurai to analyze the coloniality of power and the survival of subaltern cosmologies in the text. Ghosh’s story, when closely read and analyzed, shows how ecological wisdom is brought back as a way for culture to resist and survive. The Living Mountain is a short but strong contribution to current discussions on climate change, memory, and postcolonial identity during the Anthropocene.