Reading New India: Post-Millennial Indian Fiction in English

Author:   Dr E. Dawson Varughese (Manipal Academy of Higher Education, India)
Publisher:   Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
ISBN:  

9781441181749


Pages:   200
Publication Date:   14 February 2013
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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Reading New India: Post-Millennial Indian Fiction in English


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Author:   Dr E. Dawson Varughese (Manipal Academy of Higher Education, India)
Publisher:   Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Imprint:   Bloomsbury Academic USA
Dimensions:   Width: 15.60cm , Height: 1.50cm , Length: 23.40cm
Weight:   0.290kg
ISBN:  

9781441181749


ISBN 10:   1441181741
Pages:   200
Publication Date:   14 February 2013
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Undergraduate ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.
Language:   English

Table of Contents

Introduction: From Postcolonial India to New India 1.1 'Indianness' since Independence 1.2 Literary 'Indianness' 1.3 New India, a New Canon 2. Urban Scapes 2.1 Mumbai 2.2 Bangalore 3. Chick Lit - Crick Lit 3.1 Chick Lit 3.2 Crick Lit 4. Young India 4.1 Call Centres and Corporate Lives 4.2 MSMs 5. Crime Writing 5.1 Female Detectives 5.2 Difference and Death 6. Fantasy and Epic Myth 6.1 New [Fantastical] India 6.2 Bharat Fantasy 7. Graphic Novels 7.1 The Harappa Files (2011) 7.2 Kashmir Pending (2007) Conclusion: New/Old Stories in Old/New Ways Further Reading Index

Reviews

A thoughtful look, laden with insight, at the ways in which a new India is being written and read. -- Namita Gokhale, Writer, Publisher And Co-Director Of The Jaipur Literature Festival 20130130


A thoughtful look, laden with insight, at the ways in which a new India is being written and read. -- Namita Gokhale, Writer, publisher and co-director of the Jaipur Literature Festival The splendor and the misery of Reading New India is that it whets the appetite for the fiction it introduces but necessarily fails to satiate the appetite thus awakened. -- Emily Coolidge Toker LSE Review of Books Varughese's book is a gift for academics teaching Indian writing in English. And perhaps it will outshine all other books in the 'academic' library with its lively and pulpy, Karan Joharesque cover of bright yellow and pink. -- Anubha Yadav The Book Review India Reading New India provides a much needed and timely introduction to postmillennial India and Indian English literature within India as they move beyond the postcolonial past and forward into 'Newness'. -- Ashwinee Pendharkar Transnational Literature This is an ambitious and novel project, strenuous though, considering the vast body of literature to be considered. And [Dawson] has done it with a sense of academic objectivity. Reading New India: Post-Millennial Fiction in English - the first book to focus on fiction at the millennium, the crossroad for India's globalisation - is not a critique or a collection of reviews of individual novels or a generalised assessment of the oeuvre of individual writers, but a representation of various trends, themes, motifs, lineaments, zeitgeist, dynamic & conflicting cultural mores & values informing the fiction in hand, and an analysis of the core themes of some of the individual typical novels written in different voices. The Hans India The book is racy, giving you a smooth ride peppered with Indian exotica. You can't stop once you hold it in hands. It is a thorough work in itself. And who says, you get to know a place by reading its history and sociology only. Varughese fulfills it through her literary sojourn as well in an impeccable manner. Besides literary archives, you could place it in tourism section also to show the new rising India, in a big stroke. -- Zafar Anjum Kitaab Review Occasionally there's a book that catches the eye and this expos of post-millennial Indian fiction in English is no exception . An experienced field researcher of world literature in English, Emma Dawson Varughese has put some painstaking work into her research describing how Indian fiction has moved beyond notions of 'postcolonial' writing to reveal progressively self-assured and varied cultures. -- Rama Gaind PS News [T]his book marks important new interventions into the classification of contemporary Indian literature as moving away from a postcolonial paradigm that axiomatically centralizes the impact of British colonization as the defining Indian legacy. The strengths of the work undoubtedly lie in its ability to identify and delineate new and evolving trends in literature backed up by detailed close readings of selected novels. Furthermore, though the preface envisions the readership as predominantly Indian, a glossary of terms, a timeline, and author biographies open it up to a wider readership, and it will undoubtedly prove to be a useful resource for countless students of contemporary Indian literature. -- Sarah Ilott, Lancaster University, UK Interventions


A thoughtful look, laden with insight, at the ways in which a new India is being written and read. -- Namita Gokhale, Writer, publisher and co-director of the Jaipur Literature Festival 20130130 The splendor and the misery of Reading New India is that it whets the appetite for the fiction it introduces but necessarily fails to satiate the appetite thus awakened. -- Emily Coolidge Toker LSE Review of Books


A thoughtful look, laden with insight, at the ways in which a new India is being written and read. -- Namita Gokhale, Writer, publisher and co-director of the Jaipur Literature Festival 20130130 The splendor and the misery of Reading New India is that it whets the appetite for the fiction it introduces but necessarily fails to satiate the appetite thus awakened. -- Emily Coolidge Toker LSE Review of Books Varughese's book is a gift for academics teaching Indian writing in English. And perhaps it will outshine all other books in the 'academic' library with its lively and pulpy, Karan Joharesque cover of bright yellow and pink. -- Anubha Yadav The Book Review India 20130909 Reading New India provides a much needed and timely introduction to postmillennial India and Indian English literature within India as they move beyond the postcolonial past and forward into 'Newness'. -- Ashwinee Pendharkar Transnational Literature 20131101 This is an ambitious and novel project, strenuous though, considering the vast body of literature to be considered. And [Dawson] has done it with a sense of academic objectivity. Reading New India: Post-Millennial Fiction in English - the first book to focus on fiction at the millennium, the crossroad for India's globalisation - is not a critique or a collection of reviews of individual novels or a generalised assessment of the oeuvre of individual writers, but a representation of various trends, themes, motifs, lineaments, zeitgeist, dynamic & conflicting cultural mores & values informing the fiction in hand, and an analysis of the core themes of some of the individual typical novels written in different voices. The Hans India 20130726 The book is racy, giving you a smooth ride peppered with Indian exotica. You can't stop once you hold it in hands. It is a thorough work in itself. And who says, you get to know a place by reading its history and sociology only. Varughese fulfills it through her literary sojourn as well in an impeccable manner. Besides literary archives, you could place it in tourism section also to show the new rising India, in a big stroke. -- Zafar Anjum Kitaab Review Occasionally there's a book that catches the eye and this expose of post-millennial Indian fiction in English is no exception . An experienced field researcher of world literature in English, Emma Dawson Varughese has put some painstaking work into her research describing how Indian fiction has moved beyond notions of 'postcolonial' writing to reveal progressively self-assured and varied cultures. -- Rama Gaind PS News [T]his book marks important new interventions into the classification of contemporary Indian literature as moving away from a postcolonial paradigm that axiomatically centralizes the impact of British colonization as the defining Indian legacy. The strengths of the work undoubtedly lie in its ability to identify and delineate new and evolving trends in literature backed up by detailed close readings of selected novels. Furthermore, though the preface envisions the readership as predominantly Indian, a glossary of terms, a timeline, and author biographies open it up to a wider readership, and it will undoubtedly prove to be a useful resource for countless students of contemporary Indian literature. -- Sarah Ilott, Lancaster University, UK Interventions


Author Information

E. Dawson Varughese, author of Beyond The Postcolonial: World Englishes Literature (2012) is an experienced field researcher of world literature in English. She is the editor of numerous anthologies of short stories from such countries as Cameroon, Uganda and Malaysia. See her work at: www.beyondthepostcolonial.com

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