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This critical volume of essays explores how texts and literary
theories interrelate and interconnect different principles of
critical evaluation. Reading for pleasure is different from reading
for aesthetic sensibility. To read literature is to seek experience
but interpreting the text is to add perspective. A skilled reader
will apply multiple lenses to the same text to explore how
different texts and theories interact with each other. The Mirror
and the Reflections collects various approaches to literary theory
from a postcolonial perspective. It offers an invaluable resource
for those who wish to familiarize themselves with multifaceted
approaches to literature.
Folktales of Mizoram is a translated collection of sixty-six short
stories from northeast India taken up for a critical evaluation.
The stories depict a typical Mizo culture in spirit and practice.
This study focuses on the transformation of oral literature into
written narratives. Folk practices, folk medicine, folk narratives,
traditional songs, and received wisdom dominate these stories. A
more insightful approach into folk narratives and songs emphasizes
the world of new hermeneutics. The land, the culture, the language,
the traditions have been remarkably explored through an elegant
reading and evaluation of this collection. Antiquity speaks through
the folk tales. The spirit of folktales becomes one of unique
exploration of hermeneutics in the end.
In this incisive new book, P. V. Laxmiprasad addresses the great
Indian queen Rani Chennamma of Kittur as a character in Indian
fiction. The Queen of Kittur by Basavaraj Naikar highlights the
themes of honor and glory, patriotism and freedom, betrayal and
defeat of the royal family of Kittur as revealed by the life of
Rani Chennamma. This novel is a precious jewel in Indian
literature. Laxmiprasad's critical evaluation contextualizes female
Indian royalty as a subject in historical fiction and rising force
of nationalism, heroism, and solidarity.
A multi-faceted creative personality, Rabindranath Tagore is one of
the greatest stalwarts of both English and Bengali literatures. He
created a Renaissance in India, where people were awakened by the
great corpus of creative work produced during the country's
struggle for independence from the British. Tagore was undoubtedly
a champion of this literary protest. He produced masterpieces in
Bengali literature and later translated them into English.
Gitanjali, his masterpiece collection of poems with a foreword by
William Butler Yeats, is renowned for its rhythmic, optimistic, and
lyrical nature. It won Tagore the Nobel Prize for Literature, the
first awarded to an Asian writer, and a knighthood. In this
landmark study, noted Indian scholar P. V. Laxmiprasad offers the
most comprehensive critical study of Tagore's work to date.
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