The Ambiguous Identity of a Dog as a Mongrelized Storyteller in John Berger's King (1999)
Streszczenie
The dog named King, the central character and narrator of John Berger’s “King” published in
1999, is the offshoot of many apparently incongruent genre conventions as well as the
offspring of the ambivalent prejudice and praise of the species encoded in the English idioms.
This presentation aims to overview the contributing elements which gave rise to the
Bergerian shift in character-narrator shaping and to discuss the function of such perspective
for the novelistic format adopted. The discussion points out the central role of the ambiguity
of King as a dog, demonstrating the post-fantastic nature of his characterisation rooted in the
conventions of magic realism. The patterns used to shape King, the dog, as one of the
community and at the same time the Other are discussed. He is a befriended dog who
becomes almost a family member for the beggars and, at the same time, he is the other,
different species. He is both one of the homeless and at the same time the independent one,
the stranger who sees more because of the distance inscribed into his nature of a rambling
dog. Such is also the function of the fantastic in his shaping, as it is sometimes not quite clear
that he is just a talking dog, derived from the tradition of animal fable. He might as well be
taken as a mentally challenged human being who lost his identity. The merging of
perspectives on all levels of the novel contributes to the dialogic quality of the narration in the
Bakhtinian sense, to which the central ambiguities inscribed in the shaping of the quasifantastic
dog add the quality of uncertainty and polyvalence.
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