Analyse
Gurnah’s statement aligns with extensive academic research confirming the Indian Ocean as a vibrant zone of trade, cultural exchange, and migration for centuries before European colonialism (e.g., the Swahili Coast, Monsoon trade networks, and Islamic scholarly networks). His novels, such as *Paradise* (1994) and *By the Sea* (2001), deliberately center these pre-colonial histories, emphasizing African and Asian agency. The claim is not only factually accurate but also reflective of his stated literary project. No credible counter-evidence undermines this historical consensus.
Achtergrond
The Indian Ocean region was a hub of transoceanic trade from at least the 1st millennium CE, linking East Africa, the Arabian Peninsula, South Asia, and Southeast Asia through commerce in goods like spices, textiles, and ivory, as well as the spread of religions (Islam, Hinduism, Buddhism) and languages (e.g., Swahili). European colonial powers (Portuguese, Dutch, British) only began dominating these networks in the 16th–19th centuries. Gurnah, a Nobel laureate (2021), has consistently highlighted these histories to counter Eurocentric narratives of global interaction.
Samenvatting verdict
Abdulrazak Gurnah’s claim about pre-colonial Indian Ocean connectivity is well-supported by historical scholarship, and his literary work explicitly engages with this theme.