Mahashweta Devi’s story is about the reawakening of a mother proselytized by the death of her son against the backdrop of the systematic “annihilation” of the Naxalites in the 1970’s Bengal. The uncanny death forces the apolitical mother to embark on a quest for the discovery of her ‘real’ son which eventually leads to her own self-discovery. The discovery entails the knowledge of certain truths or half truths about the particular socio-political milieu in which the characters are located. Sujata conditioned to play the submissive, unquestioning wife and mother for the major part of her life gains a new consciousness about her own reality (as a woman) and her immediate context (the patriarchal / feudal order). She th...
In Indian social setup a woman is a silent sufferer and is given secondary status both in the family...
Ashapurna Devi, a prominent Bengali woman novelist (1909–1995) focused on women’s creativity and enl...
Mahasweta Devi’s writings are mostly premised on the project of lending space and voice to the unack...
Abstract Mahasweta Devi is a prolific writer who has used her pen for the causes of t...
The play “Mother of 1084” was written by the prominent Bengali literary figure Mahasweta Devi. T...
Mahasweta Devi is a prolific writer who has used her pen for the causes of the most deprived section...
Born on 14 January, 1926 in Dhaka (then undivided India, now in Bangladesh) toartist Manish Chandra ...
Contemplating over the deprived section of the society, the vision that confronts the mental horizon...
Ashapurna Devi, a prominent Bengali woman novelist (1909–1995) focused on women’s creativity and enl...
The famous Bengali writer and activist Mahasweta Devi explore the different phases of women sufferin...
Sudha Kulkarni Murthy was born in the year 1950 in Shiggaon in Karnataka. She is a teacher of Kannad...
“Life is not arithmetic, and man is not made for the game of politics. For me, all political p...
If, in general, there has been a move away from the huge ambition of the average monumental postcolo...
The paper is a study of Ashapurna Devi’s Satyabati Trilogy in English translation to locate the wome...
Psychoanalytic jurisprudence attempts to understand the images used by law to attract and capture th...
In Indian social setup a woman is a silent sufferer and is given secondary status both in the family...
Ashapurna Devi, a prominent Bengali woman novelist (1909–1995) focused on women’s creativity and enl...
Mahasweta Devi’s writings are mostly premised on the project of lending space and voice to the unack...
Abstract Mahasweta Devi is a prolific writer who has used her pen for the causes of t...
The play “Mother of 1084” was written by the prominent Bengali literary figure Mahasweta Devi. T...
Mahasweta Devi is a prolific writer who has used her pen for the causes of the most deprived section...
Born on 14 January, 1926 in Dhaka (then undivided India, now in Bangladesh) toartist Manish Chandra ...
Contemplating over the deprived section of the society, the vision that confronts the mental horizon...
Ashapurna Devi, a prominent Bengali woman novelist (1909–1995) focused on women’s creativity and enl...
The famous Bengali writer and activist Mahasweta Devi explore the different phases of women sufferin...
Sudha Kulkarni Murthy was born in the year 1950 in Shiggaon in Karnataka. She is a teacher of Kannad...
“Life is not arithmetic, and man is not made for the game of politics. For me, all political p...
If, in general, there has been a move away from the huge ambition of the average monumental postcolo...
The paper is a study of Ashapurna Devi’s Satyabati Trilogy in English translation to locate the wome...
Psychoanalytic jurisprudence attempts to understand the images used by law to attract and capture th...
In Indian social setup a woman is a silent sufferer and is given secondary status both in the family...
Ashapurna Devi, a prominent Bengali woman novelist (1909–1995) focused on women’s creativity and enl...
Mahasweta Devi’s writings are mostly premised on the project of lending space and voice to the unack...