%0 Journal Article %T The graveyard and the garden: Reading connectivities in Rana Dasgupta¡¯s ¡°The Changeling¡± %A Helle Schulz Bilds£¿e %A Ulla Rahbek %J The Journal of Commonwealth Literature %@ 1741-6442 %D 2019 %R 10.1177/0021989416685756 %X In the novel Tokyo Cancelled (2005), Rana Dasgupta explores the contemporary age of globalization as a time of chaotic change. Tokyo Cancelled is composed as a story cycle of 13 tales. This article focuses on one of these tales in particular, ¡°The Changeling¡±. ¡°The Changeling¡± relates the tumultuous experiences of Bernard, who is a changeling and archetypal stranger in the pestilence-ridden city of contemporary Paris. The article explores the juxtaposition of systemic and organic networks as the central trope through which Dasgupta explores change and connectivities in a global twenty-first-century moment. We argue that the story presents a process of symbolic transformation whereby the national capital changes into a global city. This change signifies a shift from a national towards a planetary perspective. ¡°The Changeling¡± comprises at least two different kinds of networks which converge and conflate into one overarching web that is the metropolis: there is a systemic network of control materialized in Montparnasse graveyard and an organic network out of control manifested in a community garden where people congregate to tell stories. Indeed, Dasgupta revisits Benjaminian storytelling as a global networking practice which, while locally contextualized in an impromptu garden in Paris, hints at an awareness of worldwide connectivity %K ¡°The Changeling¡± %K connectivity %K Rana Dasgupta %K globalization %K human identity %K networks %K storytelling %K strangers %K Tokyo Cancelled %U https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/0021989416685756