How does a creative writer, situated in a geography of disaster, represent a disaster? Which areas or factors of the disaster does he highlight and which does he ignore? What happens if that writer is also a professional historian, journalist, and social scientist? These are some of the questions that this essay asks through a reading of the representation of the 1943–44 Bengal famine in Bhabani Bhattacharya’s novels. The first section concerns the relations between late colonial governance, disaster, and violence in So Many Hungers! (1947), and the second analyses the roles of caste, law, and subaltern agency during this famine in He Who Rides a Tiger (1954). This essay argues that the Second World War, the class basis of the disaster, and...
Abstract hattacharya was an outstanding Indo-Anglian novelist of the twentieth century. He acclaimed...
This book studies postcolonial Indian novels in order to understand the nature and character of Indi...
Since the advent of British rule in 1765, the colony of Bengal, once hailed as the most fertile and ...
How does a creative writer, situated in a geography of disaster, represent a disaster? What happens ...
The 1943–1944 Bengal famine is a watershed in Indian history. Born of a long-term crisis in agricult...
Representing both a major front in the Indian struggle against colonial rule, as well as a crucial f...
Bhabani Bhattacharyas So Many Hungers! is a story about different hungers of the people representing...
This paper focuses on the Indian cultural background having the themes like hunger, poverty, famine,...
In the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, the colonies controlled by the British, the Dutch, and ot...
Representing both a major front in the Indian struggle against colonial rule, as well as a crucial f...
Famine research has gained ground in both Asia and Africa in recent times and it is well known that ...
Even the most comprehensive famine accounts rely primarily on large-scale demographic and statistica...
As a boat moved across the Brahmaputra River from Bahadurabad, in 1943 October morning, a scientist ...
In this article, I interrogate the representation of bodies on the Indian home-front in 1943, the ye...
This article offers a brief summary of the complex factors leading to the famine in Bengal in the 19...
Abstract hattacharya was an outstanding Indo-Anglian novelist of the twentieth century. He acclaimed...
This book studies postcolonial Indian novels in order to understand the nature and character of Indi...
Since the advent of British rule in 1765, the colony of Bengal, once hailed as the most fertile and ...
How does a creative writer, situated in a geography of disaster, represent a disaster? What happens ...
The 1943–1944 Bengal famine is a watershed in Indian history. Born of a long-term crisis in agricult...
Representing both a major front in the Indian struggle against colonial rule, as well as a crucial f...
Bhabani Bhattacharyas So Many Hungers! is a story about different hungers of the people representing...
This paper focuses on the Indian cultural background having the themes like hunger, poverty, famine,...
In the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, the colonies controlled by the British, the Dutch, and ot...
Representing both a major front in the Indian struggle against colonial rule, as well as a crucial f...
Famine research has gained ground in both Asia and Africa in recent times and it is well known that ...
Even the most comprehensive famine accounts rely primarily on large-scale demographic and statistica...
As a boat moved across the Brahmaputra River from Bahadurabad, in 1943 October morning, a scientist ...
In this article, I interrogate the representation of bodies on the Indian home-front in 1943, the ye...
This article offers a brief summary of the complex factors leading to the famine in Bengal in the 19...
Abstract hattacharya was an outstanding Indo-Anglian novelist of the twentieth century. He acclaimed...
This book studies postcolonial Indian novels in order to understand the nature and character of Indi...
Since the advent of British rule in 1765, the colony of Bengal, once hailed as the most fertile and ...