Denial is a River in Egypt
A Critical Review: The English Patient and the Ethics of Historical Erasure Subject: Michael Ondaatje’s The English Patient (1992) Context: The Development of The Rebecca Affair and the Ethics of Espionage Narrative To the reader of The English Patient, the experience is often one of immersion in a lush, atmospheric romance set against the backdrop of World War II. It is a high-brow example of the genre, winning the Booker Prize and captivating audiences with its fragmented, dreamlike structure. However, for the author looking at the story anew, and for any writer attempting to navigate the treacherous waters of historical espionage, Ondaatje’s novel serves as a cautionary tale—a prime example of how not to write when the goal is to expose the systemic rot of colonialism and the truth of human behavior. The Contradiction of "Truth by Lying" Ondaatje’s central thesis is "truth by lying"—the idea that strict historical accuracy stifles emotional resonance. He argues t...