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Women In Postcolonial Indian English Literature: Redefining the Self

by Malti Agarwal
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Current price ₹487.00
Original price ₹695.00
Original price ₹695.00
Original price ₹695.00
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₹487.00
Current price ₹487.00

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Book cover type: Hardcover
  • ISBN13: 9788126914654
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • Subject: English Literature
  • Publisher: Atlantic Publishers & Distributors (P) Ltd
  • Publisher Imprint: Atlantic
  • Publication Date:
  • Pages: 286
  • Original Price: INR 695.0
  • Language: English
  • Edition: N/A
  • Item Weight: 320 grams
  • BISAC Subject(s): General

Within the social structure of India itself, there had been a typical man-woman relationship in terms of dependence and support. Woman was supposed to be the ‘other’, caught in the cage of native cultural ethos. But gradually, spread of education and economic independence certainly brought a change in woman’s status in society; the Feminist movement also established her as an individual. Notwithstanding, she is still a victim of patriarchal rage, male domination, sexual harassment, colonial mindset of males and so on. She is not treated as a person but only as a possession. She is a victim not only of man’s inhuman attitude but also of a system—the Hindu Dharma—which maintains that wife is her husband’s property and has no individuality outside that system. In Indian English Writings, the woman sometimes maintains the image of a self-sacrificial woman, to whom her pati is her parameshwar but sometimes she emerges as a revolutionary, struggling for her rights and standing against the patriarchal set-up of the Indian society. The writers of new generation like Shashi Deshpande, Nayantara Sehgal, Anita Desai, Githa Hariharan, Manju Kapur and others have depicted females who are no longer silent sufferers but have learnt to give voice, either vocally or silently, to their ‘unvoiced resentment’. The present anthology consists of thirty-one critical papers on the literary works of the eminent fictionists and dramatists of India. The papers on Shashi Deshpande, Nayantara Sahgal, Anita Desai, Githa Hahiharan, Manju Kapur and others bring home the fact that the Indian women, despite all subjugation, know how to struggle for their existence. They are now capable enough to change their lives through self-analysis and self-understanding. The educated and emancipated women eventually succeed in finding out the ways of ‘uncompromising survival’. A bulk of papers on the established and emerging Indian dramatists like Vijay Tendulkar, Girish Karnad and Mahesh Dattani provide a comprehensive idea of the feminine sensibility of these icons of Indian theatre. The female protagonists of these renowned dramatists are no more caged birds. They have learnt how to break the shackles of tradition and fly like a bird in the open sky. No doubt, all these women characters, despite being images of tolerance and forbearance, are bold enough to carve a niche for themselves in this world of oppression. The articles on new authors like Nisha Da Cunha and Ambai describe inquisitiveness of ordinary women who want to connect themselves with the wider world to have purposeful existence. An article on Chetan Bhagat, a technocrat by profession, analyses new woman’s struggle for survival in the technocratic world. The book will be highly useful to the teachers, students and research scholars of various universities who are working in the field of Indian Writings in English.

Malti Agarwal is Reader and Head, Department of English, N.A.S. (P.G.) College, Meerut, a premier institution of Western Uttar Pradesh and affiliated to C.C.S. University, Meerut. She has been teaching postgraduate classes since 1974. She has published a good number of papers in journals of repute. Other books authored by her are Professional Communication (2 Volumes), Technical Writing in English, Objective English for Competitions, Communication for Management, and Business Communication. She has edited two anthologies entitled New Perspectives in Indian English Writings and English Literature: Voices of Indian Diaspora. She is keenly interested in holding seminars, conferences and symposia.

  • Preface
  • 1. Redefining the Self: Women in Postcolonial Indian English Literature: An Indian Approach–Shrawan K. Sharma
  • 2. Voicing for Space: Contemporary Indian Women’s Poetry in English–Sudhir K. Arora
  • 3. Many Faces of Resistance
  • A Study of A Matter of Time–Usha Bande
  • 4. Women: Caged or Liberated?–Neha Arora
  • 5. Engendering Newer Identities: Women in Mahesh Dattani’s Plays–Hemalatha K.
  • 6. Vijay Tendulkar’s Plays: A Rich Tapestry of Women’s Stories–Gunjan Chaturvedi
  • 7. Vijay Tendulkar’s His Fifth Woman (2004)
  • An Insight into Social Reality–Harbir Singh Randhawa
  • 8. Vijay Tendulkar’s Silence! The Court is in Session: A Study in Feminine Sensibilities–Malti Agarwal
  • 9. Reconstructing the ‘Self’ in Vijay Tendulkar’s Kamala–Lucky Gupta
  • 10. Girish Karnad’s Hayavadana: A Woman’s Vain Quest for Perfection–M.L. Garg
  • 11. Revisioning Myths, Dreams and History: A Feminist Reading of Githa Hariharan’s Novels–Sunita Sinha
  • 12. Quest for Meaning and Self-Assertion: A Study of Maya’s Interior Journey in Anita Desai’s Cry, The Peacock–Ravi Jauhari, Kiran Kamboj and B.R. Agrawal
  • 13. Is Liberation Possible?: Redefining Womanhood with Special Reference to Desai’s Maya and Narayan’s Sushila–Medha Sachdev
  • 14. Emergence of ‘Changed Woman’ in the Major Works of Anita Desai–Alka Rani
  • 15. A Quest for Identity and Self: Reflections on Manju Kapur’s Difficult Daughters–Anju Bala Agrawal
  • 16. Existential Agony of Virmati in Manju Kapur’s Difficult Daughters–Anuradha Verma
  • 17. Breaking the Bonds: Women in the Fiction of Nayantara Sahgal–Alka Bansal
  • 18. Representation of Women’s Space and Identity in Nayantara Sahgal’s Rich Like Us and Mistaken Identity–Aniqua Sadia
  • 19. Searching Woman’s Self in Nayantara Sahgal’s Rich Like Us–Seema Gupta
  • 20. Women’s Search for Individuality: A Critique on the Female Characters of Nayantara Sahgal–Sandhya Saxena
  • 21. Redefining and Reconstructing Female ‘Self’ in Anita Nair’s Ladies Coupe–Beena Agarwal
  • 22. A Criss-Cross Spectrum of Female Sensibilities in Anita Nair’s Ladies Coupe–Ranjana Mehrotra
  • 23. Self in Kamala Das’ My Story: A Source of Strength and Transformation for Emotionally Deprived–Charu Chitra
  • 24. Kamala Markandaya’s Nectar in a Sieve: A Saga of Feminine Resilience and Nobility–Nirupama Sharma and Shalini Sharma
  • 25. Changing Faces of Indian Woman: Bharati Mukherjee’s Jasmine and Githa Hariharan’s The Thousand Faces of Night–Abha Shukla Kaushik
  • 26. Redefining ‘Mother’ in Mahasweta Devi’s Breast Giver–Sangeeta Das
  • 27. In Search of Fulfillment: Women in Arundhati Roy’s The God of Small Things–Amrit Kaur
  • 28. Society of Technocrats and Spaces for Women
  • A Critical Appraisal of Chetan Bhagat’s One Night @ the Call Center–Neeta
  • 29. A Study of Nisha Da Cunha’s Female Characters in Old Cypress–Rashmi Attri
  • 30. Voices, Whispers and Silences of Women in the Stories of Ambai in A Purple Sea–Shahla Gauri
  • 31. A Saga of Women’s Problems: A Sociological Study of Ismat Chugtai’s Lifting the Veil–Anju Bhatt
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