Affiliation:
1. Ukrainian State University of Science and Technologies
2. Oles Honchar Dnipro National University
Abstract
Today humanity is going through a period of great upheavals and
rapid changes in every sphere of life, including the environment, that inevitably
lead to general destabilisation and disruptions. In the latest novel by Rumaan
Alam, apocalyptic Leave the World Behind (2020), a crisis appears to reshape
our closest bonds and forge new ones. This story of an invisible terror deals with
cataclysmic but mysterious events that shut down the communication networks
we over-rely on, and sees an almost overwhelming sense of uncertainty, panic
and increasing anxiety. Isolated in the remote holiday house with the Vermont
stone kitchen tops and night-lit swimming pool, a couple of New Yorkers and
their teenage children are looking forward to taking a rest from the routines of
city life when catastrophe strikes. In addition to the major theme of the threat of
human extinction, Leave the World Behind explores the relationship between
class and race and the complexities of parenthood and solitude during an
unspecified disaster. Those issues are included in the context of the global
problem of anthropogenic impacts on the environment. At the same time, Alam
demonstrates how habituation to the ongoing crises in the modern world,
including social-ecological transformations, affects the understanding of a
severe situation people are facing and ways to prevent it: they have increasing
tolerance for the absurd. The suspenseful, provocative and prescient book, Leave
the World Behind, captures the generalised panic of 2020, the year of a global
outbreak of coronavirus. As a kind of end-of-the-world fiction, the novel is full
of moments of exquisite recognition and reappraising of our attitudes the article
discusses.
Publisher
Faculty of Philology - University of Montenegro