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Abstract
Amitav Ghosh’s fiction is distinguished by its rich polyphonic texture and its sustained commitment to representing multiple, often marginalized, voices within complex historical, cultural, and geopolitical contexts. Drawing upon Mikhail Bakhtin’s concept of polyphony, this research article examines how Ghosh employs multiplicity of voices as a narrative strategy to challenge monologic histories, nationalist grand narratives, and Eurocentric epistemologies. Through an analysis of selected novels including The Shadow Lines, The Glass Palace, The Hungry Tide, and the Ibis Trilogy (Sea of Poppies, River of Smoke, and Flood of Fire), the paper explores how Ghosh constructs dialogic narratives that accommodate diverse perspectives such as migrants, subalterns, traders, women, scientists, indigenous communities, and colonial subjects. The study argues that Ghosh’s polyphonic narrative mode enables a reimagining of history as fragmented, contested, and plural, thereby democratizing storytelling and foregrounding ethical responsibility toward silenced voices. By blending oral histories, archival materials, myths, scientific discourse, and personal memories, Ghosh creates narrative spaces where no single voice claims absolute authority. The article concludes that polyphony in Ghosh’s fiction is not merely a stylistic choice but a deeply political and ethical intervention that reflects the complexities of postcolonial identity, global interconnectedness, and historical consciousness.