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This study explores the connections between a secular Indian nation and fiction in English by a number of postcolonial Indian writers of the 1980s and 90s. Examining writers such as Vikram Seth, Salman Rushdie, Amitav Ghosh, Shashi Tharoor, and Rohinton Mistry, with particularly close readings of Midnight's Children, A Suitable Boy, The Shadow Lines and The Satanic Verses, Neelam Srivastava investigates different aspects of postcolonial identity within the secular framework of the Anglophone novel. The book traces the breakdown of the Nehruvian secular consensus between 1975 and 2005 through these narratives of postcolonial India. In particular, it examines how these writers use the novel form to re-write colonial and nationalist versions of Indian history, and how they radically reinvent English as a secular language for narrating India. Ultimately, it delineates a common conceptual framework for secularism and cosmopolitanism, by arguing that Indian secularism can be seen as a located, indigenous form of a cosmopolitan identity.
Indic fiction (English) --- Secularism in literature. --- Cosmopolitanism in literature. --- Postcolonialism in literature. --- Identity (Psychology) in literature. --- History and criticism. --- India --- In literature. --- Cosmopolitanism in literature --- Identity (Psychology) in literature --- Postcolonialism in literature --- Secularism in literature --- History and criticism --- Roman indien (de l'Inde) de langue anglaise --- Sécularisme --- Cosmopolitisme --- Postcolonialisme --- 20e siècle --- Histoire et critique --- Dans la littérature --- Histoire de la littérature --- Sécularisme --- 20e siècle --- Dans la littérature --- Histoire de la littérature
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Postcolonialism. --- Postcolonialism in literature. --- #SBIB:39A4 --- #SBIB:327.4H21 --- #SBIB:321H60 --- Post-colonialism --- Postcolonial theory --- Political science --- Decolonization --- Toegepaste antropologie --- Kolonisatie / dekolonisatie / post-kolonisatie --- Westerse politieke en sociale theorieën vanaf de 19e eeuw: socialisme, marxisme, communisme, anarchisme --- Gramsci, Antonio, --- Gramshi, Antonio, --- Gramši, Antonije, --- Gramshi, A. --- Gramši, Antonio, --- Gkramsi, Antonio, --- גרמשי, אנטוניו, --- Influence. --- Influence (Literary, artistic, etc.). --- Criticism --- Postcolonialism in literature --- History --- Criticism and interpretation. --- Gramshi, Antonio --- Gramši, Antonije --- Gramši, Antonio --- Gkramsi, Antonio
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This timely volume focuses on the period of decolonization and the Cold War as the backdrop to the emergence of new and diverse literary aesthetics that accompanied anti-imperialist commitments and Afro-Asian solidarity. Competing internationalist frameworks produced a flurry of writings that made Asian, African and other world literatures visible to each other for the first time. The book's essays examine a host of print culture formats (magazines, newspapers, manifestos, conference proceedings, ephemera, etc.) and modes of cultural mediation and transnational exchange that enabled the construction of a variously inflected Third-World culture which played a determining role throughout the Cold War. The essays in this collection focus on locations as diverse as Morocco, Tunisia, South Asia, China, Spain, and Italy, and on texts in Arabic, English, French, Hindi, Italian, and Spanish. In doing so, they highlight the combination of local debates and struggles, and internationalist networks and aspirations that found expression in essays, novels, travelogues, translations, reviews, reportages and other literary forms. With its comparative study of print cultures with a focus on decolonization and the Cold War, the volume makes a major contribution both to studies of postcolonial literary and print cultures, and to cultural Cold War studies in multilingual and non-Western contexts, and will be of interest to historians and literary scholars alike.
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