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Shankari Chandran’s The Barrier (2017) and the Complex Stakes of Decolonizing Dystopian Writing Cover

Shankari Chandran’s The Barrier (2017) and the Complex Stakes of Decolonizing Dystopian Writing

By:   
Open Access
|May 2026

Abstract

The article analyzes the Australian-Sri Lankan writer Shankari Chandran’s novel The Barrier (2017) as a dystopian novel, exploring how it sets up stakes around pandemics and the political use of the Ebola virus and vaccines in a near-future world divided by a barrier between East and West. With its many twists and turns, the novel, I argue, critiques an unequal and dystopian global order, with both Eastern and Western Alliances participating in injustices. The novel makes a powerful decolonial claim, based on the sacred text the Bhagavad Gita, for faith (not organized religion) as a generative human capacity, and compellingly entangles this in its plotline. I analyze this from the perspective of the complex stakes of decolonizing knowledge as well as dystopian fiction, and argue that Chandran’s work is part of a wider lineage of South Asian women-authored utopian and dystopian writing highlighting the importance of inclusivity and faith. (BB)

DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/hjeas/2026/32/1/8 | Journal eISSN: 2732-0421 | Journal ISSN: 1218-7364
Language: English
Page range: 146 - 160
Published on: May 25, 2026
Published by: University of Debrecen
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 2 issues per year

© 2026 Barnita Bagchi, published by University of Debrecen
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 License.