Subjected Subcontinent (kartoniertes Buch)

Sectarian and Sexual Lines in Indian Writing in English, Cultural Identity Studies 30
Verlag:
ISBN/EAN: 9783034322065
Sprache: Englisch
Umfang: 298 S.
Einband: kartoniertes Buch
This book offers a more complex understanding of Indian writing in English by focusing its analysis on Indo-Pakistani Partition fiction and novels written by women. Featured authors include Salmon Rushdie, Amitav Ghosh, Anita Desai and Arundhati Roy.

Eiko Ohira is Professor of English and Advisor to the President at Tsuru University in Japan. She is the author of

(1993) and has published essays on Rabindranath Tagore’s writing in English and Japanese writing in English in the early twentieth century. She received her MA and the Naruse Award from Japan Women’s University in Tokyo, Japan, and a Certificate of Special Graduation Course with distinction from Mount Holyoke College in the United States in 1979. She has previously been a visiting scholar at the University of Cambridge, UK, and the University of Delhi, India.

Contents: Indian Writing in English (IWE), an Overview: Gender and Politics – What is Indian Writing in English? – The Characteristics and the Issues – Indo-Pakistani Partition Novels: Identity Fallen Apart – The Overall Situation and the Issues – Partition Novels before Midnight’s Children: An Overview – Partition Novels after Midnight’s Children: An Overview – Bapsi Sidhwa’s

: Gender and Conspiracy – Amitav Ghosh’s

: Enchantment, Fear, and Hostility aroused by Border Lines and the World Beyond –

: A Narrative of Narcissist Failure – Meena Arora Nayak’s

: The Diaspora and Partition – Azad’s Memoir and Sujata Sabnis’s

: The Myth of the Founding of India/Pakistan – Women in Indian Writing in English: Sexuality, the Body, and the Diaspora – The Isolated Female Body: Sita’s Daughters and Anita Desai’s

,

, among Other Novels – Female Bodies in Revolt: Githa Hariharan’s Representation of the Female Body – The Female Body in Jouissance: Arundhati Roy’s

– Representation of the Diaspora: Kiran Desai’s

.