The novels Fasting, Feasting (1999) by Anita Desai and Half a Life (2001) by V. S. Naipaul share themes, character constellations and structural characteristics. Both novels deal with sons who resist their father’s dietary practices. Both sons are raised in post-liberation India and later emigrate to the West. Both sons’ lives highlight the political meanings of food and appetite in India. Both novels are driven by the same basic conflict: the tension between food and appetite on the one hand, and dietary restrictions and self-restraint on the other. In this article, I argue that understanding the politics of food and appetite in these novels requires a postcolonial approach, an approach that exposes the ways in which a history of dominati...
Food plays a very significant role in diasporic studies. It acts as a symbol of love and care as it ...
ABSTRACT\ud FASTING AS DISSENT: EXAMINING THE BODY DISCOURSES\ud AND PUBLICITY OF MAHATMA GANDHI AND...
In Culinary Fictions: Food in South Asian Diasporic Culture, Anita Mannur argues that food offers ‘a...
Traditional and liberal values, individualism and collectivism, and the motif of food as a symbol of...
Anita Desai’s Fasting, Feasting, as it is implied in the title itself, is a novel of contrast betwee...
Postmodern culture has been greatly influenced by food images and the usage of food as metaphor. Rec...
Global Anglophone Indian fiction is rife with food imagery. Food is cooked, consumed, discussed, and...
Among the problems left open by two centuries of British colonialism, that of Indian modernity has y...
Anita Desai's novel Anita Desai's novel Fasting, Feasting portrays transatlantic experiences of fema...
This article explores representations of fasting and feasting in Le Voile de Draupadi (1993) and Ma...
Gandhi referred to fasting as his «most potent weapon,» which he resorted to when all other means fa...
The existence of duality across the universe has led to the dominance of one over the other. Man and...
The entity of food has always been central to life as well as literature. Food can tell us a lot abo...
Bhabani Bhattacharyas So Many Hungers! is a story about different hungers of the people representing...
In her article Anita Desai\u27s Fasting, Feasting and the Condition of Women Ludmila Volná present...
Food plays a very significant role in diasporic studies. It acts as a symbol of love and care as it ...
ABSTRACT\ud FASTING AS DISSENT: EXAMINING THE BODY DISCOURSES\ud AND PUBLICITY OF MAHATMA GANDHI AND...
In Culinary Fictions: Food in South Asian Diasporic Culture, Anita Mannur argues that food offers ‘a...
Traditional and liberal values, individualism and collectivism, and the motif of food as a symbol of...
Anita Desai’s Fasting, Feasting, as it is implied in the title itself, is a novel of contrast betwee...
Postmodern culture has been greatly influenced by food images and the usage of food as metaphor. Rec...
Global Anglophone Indian fiction is rife with food imagery. Food is cooked, consumed, discussed, and...
Among the problems left open by two centuries of British colonialism, that of Indian modernity has y...
Anita Desai's novel Anita Desai's novel Fasting, Feasting portrays transatlantic experiences of fema...
This article explores representations of fasting and feasting in Le Voile de Draupadi (1993) and Ma...
Gandhi referred to fasting as his «most potent weapon,» which he resorted to when all other means fa...
The existence of duality across the universe has led to the dominance of one over the other. Man and...
The entity of food has always been central to life as well as literature. Food can tell us a lot abo...
Bhabani Bhattacharyas So Many Hungers! is a story about different hungers of the people representing...
In her article Anita Desai\u27s Fasting, Feasting and the Condition of Women Ludmila Volná present...
Food plays a very significant role in diasporic studies. It acts as a symbol of love and care as it ...
ABSTRACT\ud FASTING AS DISSENT: EXAMINING THE BODY DISCOURSES\ud AND PUBLICITY OF MAHATMA GANDHI AND...
In Culinary Fictions: Food in South Asian Diasporic Culture, Anita Mannur argues that food offers ‘a...