Critical essays on Indian writing in english / edited by Jaydipsinh K. Dodiya
By: Dodiya, Jaydipsinh K. [ed.].
Material type: TextPublisher: New Delhi : Sarup & Sons , 2006.Description: xii, 204p. : 23 cm.ISBN: 8176257273; 9788176257275.Subject(s): ENGLISH | ENGLISH LITERATURE | ENGLISH LITERATURE -- HISTORYDDC classification: 820.9954Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Books | HCC Seminar Library General Stacks | 820.9954 DOC (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 4526-8 |
Includes Index
Krishna-motif in the poetry of Kamala Das -- Niranjan Mohanty Bildungsromans as cite for interrogation of female space a comparative study of Munro and Kamala Das -- V. Sam Sahayam 'For so he sees the female image': Critiquing the male gaze in the poems of Nissim Ezekiel -- Satapa Chaudhuri Tharoor's riot: a study in the Myth of fall -- G. D. Barche Detachment and its meaning in Arun Joshi's The foreigner -- K. Ratna Shiela Mani Scrutinising Anurag Mathur's The Inscrutable Americans -- Anup C. Nair Occidental Quest for oriental spititualism in Jhabvala's three continents and Desai's journey to Ithaca -- Anita Myles Writing from the Margins: A study of Shashi Deshpande's That long silence -- Ram Sharma Bifocal visioning of the self: Jhumpa Lahiri's cultural dialogies -- Joya Chakraborty Zoroastrian worldview in Rohinton Mistry's Such a long journey -- Sanjeev Kumar Bali The Impact of Gandhian ideology on Indian english fiction -- Alka Saxena The colonial encounger: a critical response to Basavaraj Naikar's The sun behind the cloud -- S. John Peter Joseph Struggle for honour and freedom in The sun behind the cloud -- S. G. Vaidya Dina Mehta's brides are not for burning A stageworthy play -- S. Ramaswamy Cracks in the wall: Dina Mehta's brides Brides are not for Burning as a Protest play -- V. L. V. N. Narendra Kumar The emergence of the short story in Indian english writing -- Kamal Mehta Thematic concers in post-independence women short story writes -- Krishna Daiya Society and the Individual in the story of Basavaraj Naikar -- O. P. Mehta
There are no comments on this title.