In a work of stunning archival recovery and interpretive
virtuosity, Priya Joshi illuminates the cultural work performed by
two kinds of English novels in India during the colonial and
postcolonial periods. Spanning the nineteenth and twentieth
centuries, readers and writers, empire and nation, consumption and
production, "In Another Country" vividly explores a process by
which first readers and then writers of the English novel
indigenized the once imperial form and put it to their own uses.
Asking what nineteenth-century Indian readers chose to read and
why, Joshi shows how these readers transformed the literary and
cultural influences of empire. By subsequently analyzing the
eventual rise of the English novel in India, she further
demonstrates how Indian novelists, from Krupa Satthianadhan to
Salman Rushdie, took an alien form in an alien language and used it
to address local needs. Taken together in this manner, reading and
writing reveal the complex ways in which culture is continually
translated and transformed in a colonial and postcolonial
context.
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