'This paper consists of an analysis of Monsoons and Potholes (2006), the first
novel by Sri Lankan playwright Manuka Wijesinghe. Attention is paid to the ways in
which the text articulates relations between personal stories, food, history and politics.
Food plays a central role in some novels published in the last years by Sri Lankan
authors, as is the case, for instance, with Yasmine Gooneratne's A Change of Skies
(1984) and Mary Ann Mohanraj's Bodies in Motion (2005). Both these works elaborate
metaphors of identity through the dominant trope of food-encompassing cooking and
the rituals of consumption. In Monsoons and Potholes, food accompanies and illustrates
the autobiographical account of a Sri Lankan youngster born in the early 1960s, and
revisits the first twenty years in her life together with the socio-political up and downs
in her country. While it is a novel which to a great extent draws on metaphors of myth
and history, scenes of food and eating appear consistently throughout the narration,
which contribute in providing a down-to-earth (and highly satirical) version of the life
of the Sinhala upper-middle classes during the period. These images of food (and the
sets of rituals, beliefs and constrictions around it) are exploited by the author with the
aim to explore, understand and denounce the historical process which precipitated Sri
Lanka, at the beginning of the 1980s, "on the road to nowhere".' (Author's abstract)