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Musings on Indian Writing in English: Drama
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 296

Musings on Indian Writing in English: Drama

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Incredible Naipaul
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 165

Incredible Naipaul

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2016
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  • Publisher: Unknown

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Musings on Indian Writing in English: Fiction
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 228

Musings on Indian Writing in English: Fiction

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Musings on Indian Writing in English: Poetry
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 312

Musings on Indian Writing in English: Poetry

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Recent Indian English Fiction
  • Language: en

Recent Indian English Fiction

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2011
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  • Publisher: Unknown

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Contemporary Indian English Poetry and Drama
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 251

Contemporary Indian English Poetry and Drama

This anthology of essays maps the divergent issues that have become relevant in contemporary Indian English poetry and drama. By providing a clear idea about the new themes, techniques and methods used by the Indian English poets and playwrights to address the issues emerging in the changing socio-cultural scenario, particularly during the post-globalization period, the essays offer insightful observations on canon formation and its reception. It is high time to consider afresh whether the canons of Indian English poetry and drama have widened their scope to include innovative forms of writing or whether they have evolved significantly to generate novel perspectives. These questions, which are linked with the issue of canon formation and its reception are intricately woven into the fabric of these essays. This anthology will respond to the scholarly interests of inquisitive students, research scholars and academics in the field of Indian English literature.

Doris Lessing: A Writer With A Difference
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 222

Doris Lessing: A Writer With A Difference

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2008-01-01
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  • Publisher: Unknown

Acclaimed by The London Times and New York Book Review as the foremost creative descendent in the great tradition of D.H. Lawerence and T.S. Eliot Doris Lessing is unique among women writers. A writers of epic scope and starting surprises, her writings extend the boundaries of diction experiment with different genres and in the process explore the world of Africa, Briton and Space. In her more than thirty-five books she ranges from social realism to science fiction with brief forays into speculative mysticism. It is hard to think of any writer in the past half a century who has diplayed such range. She has inolved herself in a world of vital issues ranging from colonial oppression in South Africa, to the recurrent threat of nuclear holocuast, women's movement, radical politics, apartheid, dream, madness, prophecy, the complex relation between man and woman and philosophies ranging from Marxism to Sufism.

Indian Diaspora Literature: A Critical Evaluation
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 218

Indian Diaspora Literature: A Critical Evaluation

In this period of globalization, many individuals are trying to upgrade the life and for that most of them are now migrating to other lands. In the process of getting settle in new land they encounter many problems. The issue of migration and immigration brings forward the question of exile, identity, assimilation, memory, nostalgia, hopelessness, uprootedness, hybridity and so on. Indian writers have beautifully picked up experiences of such people and penned them down. Such writing is called ‘Diaspora Literature’, wherein immigrant experiences have been shared through literature. This type of literature includes expatriate stories, refugee chronicles and immigrant narratives. The prese...

The Indigenous Voice of Poetomachia
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 155

The Indigenous Voice of Poetomachia

In the present era, when all of human civilization is struggling to preserve their individualities as a result of global commercialism and totalitarianism, theatre and drama play a metonymic role in composing and shaping aspects of human existence. However, there is debate as to how much the text and the stage are able to play a significant role towards staging individual voices on the vast global platform. This book, a collection of twelve essays and two interviews from scholars across the world, explores the different perspectives of textuality and performance. The analytical mode of the plays analysed here reveals different possible directions of dramatic reading. It represents a comprehensive study of drama and theatre, and the contributions will serve as an asset for both undergraduate and graduate students. The indigenous perspectives (both in terms of theatre and drama) provided here push the reader beyond the prevailing clichéd drama and theatre studies.

Table For Four
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 191

Table For Four

It is their last evening together. Maya, Sandra and Derek, graduate students at UC Santa Cruz and house-mates for three years, prepare to sit down at the tortoise listening table for dinner with Uncle Prithvi, the house-owner. It's a cheerful and quirky household: Sandra is prone to Orkut attacks; Derek silently pines for the wistful-lookinge Afghan boy in the photo on his wall, taken while a war-journalist in Afghanistan; Maya, who has the hots for Derek, is inexplicably terrified of the ocean; elusive Uncle Prithvi communicates through notes he leaves all over the place. Sad at parting, perhaps forever, and half tipsy, they play a game of telling stories their own stories. As the evening deepens, unexpected secrets and fears of the four lives are unveiled. Sandra, abandoned at birth, tells of growing up in an orphanage with her precious twin, disabled Solana, only to be separated by circumstances; Uncle Prithvi rues the loss of his beloved daughter, whom he betrayed when he sought a new life with Karen in the US. And, Maya and Derek, who suddenly absents himself, cannot bring themselves to voice their tragedies except in a soliloquy.