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Articles

Vol. 2 No. 3 (2025): ILN Journal: Indian Literary Narratives

Crime as a Grand Adventure: Nation-Building and the Empowered Child in Arup Kumar Dutta’s The Kaziranga Trail

Submitted
31 July 2025
Published
2025-09-30

Abstract

This article investigates the contradictory function of children’s detective fiction as a medium for nationalist discourse. Taking Arup Kumar Dutta’s, The Kaziranga Trail as a case study, the paper examines how the genre simultaneously depicts crime with a conceived serious treatment while framing the detection efforts of child protagonists as an exciting adventure. The paper contends that this duality is not an inconsistency but a purposeful narrative technique aimed at fostering “governmental belonging” in young readers, thus positioning them as active participants in safeguarding a post-globalization nation.

The analysis focuses on how the genre is employed not merely for entertainment but to explore profound themes of ecological preservation, national identity, and the brutal reality of crime, thereby challenging the typically sanitised portrayal of wrongdoing in children's literature. The narrative illustrates how an innate desire for adventure can be transformed into a profound commitment to the nation. By framing the defence of national symbols as an exciting and intellectually stimulating quest, the paper highlights the narrative strategy to nurture a future generation of proactive and vigilant citizens who see themselves not as passive recipients but as active guardians of their nation. Significantly, the article discusses how this empowerment is ultimately transient, serving to uphold, rather than challenge, adult authority.

References

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