Chetan Bhagat, Mohsin Hamid, and Arundhati Roy join the ranks of south Asian novelists who also write political essays. They address various factions in society, but share a common disgust with institutional corruption and political maneuvering, and manipulation of the powerless. While attacking defensive posturing and aggressive venality, they argue for a nation that finds its strength in pluralism and that embraces the poor
The present paper tries to find out the various accounts of socio-political conditions of the period...
As the anglophone Indian novel exists in the in-between space between transnational and local cultur...
“The Glass Palace: A South Asian memoir of cultural cannibalism” is an essay that pays particular at...
A recent conference at the British Academy explored the relevance of South Asian studies today
India and Indians feature prominently in contemporary Anglophone fiction. The last quarter of a cent...
Abstract- South Asian region is facing the challenges of political instabilities, social unrest, ins...
Since the early 20th century, South Asian writers have struggled to find their place in the mainstr...
The wide resonance of the aphorism, “from shadows to the stars,” closing the 2016 suicide letter of ...
The last two decades have witnessed a growing interest in theorizing literary narratives that addres...
In the past several years, the South Asian sub-continent has been making headlines for what is seen...
In his article The India, Empire and its Colonial Practices in South Asia Yubraj Aryal claims that...
Grounded in a friendship that began in the academy, we write together to problematize collaborative ...
The debate over the impact of British colonialism and “colonial modernity” in India has hinged aroun...
In the post-colonial world, the countries of South Asia have evolved politically in different ways, ...
The present paper deals with the socio-political issues encountered after independent India represen...
The present paper tries to find out the various accounts of socio-political conditions of the period...
As the anglophone Indian novel exists in the in-between space between transnational and local cultur...
“The Glass Palace: A South Asian memoir of cultural cannibalism” is an essay that pays particular at...
A recent conference at the British Academy explored the relevance of South Asian studies today
India and Indians feature prominently in contemporary Anglophone fiction. The last quarter of a cent...
Abstract- South Asian region is facing the challenges of political instabilities, social unrest, ins...
Since the early 20th century, South Asian writers have struggled to find their place in the mainstr...
The wide resonance of the aphorism, “from shadows to the stars,” closing the 2016 suicide letter of ...
The last two decades have witnessed a growing interest in theorizing literary narratives that addres...
In the past several years, the South Asian sub-continent has been making headlines for what is seen...
In his article The India, Empire and its Colonial Practices in South Asia Yubraj Aryal claims that...
Grounded in a friendship that began in the academy, we write together to problematize collaborative ...
The debate over the impact of British colonialism and “colonial modernity” in India has hinged aroun...
In the post-colonial world, the countries of South Asia have evolved politically in different ways, ...
The present paper deals with the socio-political issues encountered after independent India represen...
The present paper tries to find out the various accounts of socio-political conditions of the period...
As the anglophone Indian novel exists in the in-between space between transnational and local cultur...
“The Glass Palace: A South Asian memoir of cultural cannibalism” is an essay that pays particular at...