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Book of Rahim
Arvind Krishna Mehrotra
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R423
Discovery Miles 4 230
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Arvind Krishna Mehrotra's new book of poems, Book of Rahim, is his
first collection of new poetry in twenty-five years. It contains
extraordinary records of the everyday, as well as a frequent
reimagining of history that makes it as commonplace as a relative
or a piece of furniture, and all the more strange and unrepeatable
because of that. These involve Mehrotra inhabiting the voice and
time of an ageing Ghalib (author of a memorable diary reflecting on
the events of the Sepoy Mutiny of 1857); his revisiting Abd
al-Rahim Khan-i-Khanan (1556-1627), a Baharlu Turk, an important
figure in the Mughal nobility during the reigns of Akbar and
Jehangir; and his discovery of objects and letters from his family
home in Lahore. The result is a frayed immediacy that hefty
historical novels find difficult to achieve. (Amit Chaudhuri)
From Ram Mohan Ray to Arundhati Roy, two hundred years of Indian
literature in English are covered in this volume, essential for
anyone interested in this increasingly important literary
tradition. Spanning a period from 1800 to the present, this
collection of historical essays covers the canonical Indian poets,
novelists, and dramatists writing in English -- names like Rudyard
Kipling, Rabrindanath Tagore, R.K. Narayan, and Salman Rushdie --
as well as lesser-known literary figures -- scientists, social
reformers, anthropologists -- who have made significant
contributions to the evolution of Indian literature in English. The
essays in this volume are arranged chronologically and are devoted
to a single author, a group of authors, or to a genre. The book
includes 150 rare and interesting photographs and sketches of
writers and their contexts.
For anyone interested in the story of English in India, or in the
finest English storytellers of India, this book, an illustrated
history of two hundred years of Indian literature in English,
should be a useful companion. It discusses the canonical poets,
novelists and dramatists as well as many of the lesser known
literary figures - scientists, spiritualists and learned men and
women - who have made major contributions to the evolution of
Indian literature in English. The book comprises 24 chapters, each
by a well-known writer or critic. Each chapter is devoted to either
a single author (Kipling, Tagore, Sri Aurobindo, R.K. Narayan,
Rushdie) or to a group of authors (the Dutt family 19th-century
Calcutta; the Indian diasporic writers of the twentieth century) or
to a genre (beginnings of the Indian novel; poetry since
Independence). This is a book for the non-specialist general
reader. Biographical information on every major Indian literary
figure is provided and the work of each author, genre or "school"
is historically contextualized. The essays can be read selectively
- for example, to follow the development of a genre - or read in
the order in which they appear, which is chronological. The
information is supplemented by 150 rare photographs and sketches of
writers, collected specially for this volume William Jones and
Thomas Macaulay, Henry Derozio and Toru Dutt, Bankim and Tagore,
Kipling and Naipaul, G.V. Desani and Raja Rao, R.K. Narayan and
Nirad C. Chaudhuri, Sarojini Naidu and Anita Desai, Gandhi and
Nehru, Mulkraj Anand and Aubrey Menen, Khushwant Singh and Ved
Mehta, Verrier Elwin and Salim Ali, Jim Corbet and M. Krishnan,
Nissim Ezekiel and A.K. Ramanujan, Salman Rushdie and Vikram Seth,
Amitav Ghosh and I. Allan Sealy, Gieve Patel and Girish Karnad,
social reformers and religious thinkers, conservationists and
hunters, drama and translation, this volume covers everything of
literary significance in India from Ram Mohan Ray to Arundhati.
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