Representing India
Literatures, Politics, and Identities
Price: 695.00 INR
ISBN:
9780195692266
Publication date:
12/12/2007
Hardback
Price: 695.00 INR
ISBN:
9780195692266
Publication date:
12/12/2007
Hardback
Mukesh Williams & Rohit Wanchoo
Suitable for: This will be useful to scholar
Rights: World Rights
Mukesh Williams & Rohit Wanchoo
Description
This book provides a critical commentary on politics, language, literature, identity, media, religion, caste, and the Indian diaspora over the last two centuries. While analysing and synthesizing work done in diverse intellectual traditions, it discusses the significance of Sanskrit and its relationship with the regional languages of India; the relationship between Hindi and Urdu; and the role of English as a language of colonial administration and education after Independence. The study also deals with the new generation of post-Independence Indian English writers, who express a whole range of emotions, which were articulated through the vernacular in the colonial period. It explores the representation of Indian identities—Hindu and Muslim—through Hindi films and also looks into the role of Hindi television programmes in construction of national and regional identities. The authors examine the problems of creating a national identity; the rise of Hindu politics in the 1990s; and Hindu–Muslim relations in the context of religious reform and political loyalty to the nation-state. They also analyse the relationship of the Indian diaspora with the motherland and the host country. Going beyond conventional boundaries of nation-states, academic disciplines, and conceptual categories, this interdisciplinary book will aid those embarking on a ‘new’ discovery of India.
Mukesh Williams & Rohit Wanchoo
Mukesh Williams & Rohit Wanchoo
Description
This book provides a critical commentary on politics, language, literature, identity, media, religion, caste, and the Indian diaspora over the last two centuries. While analysing and synthesizing work done in diverse intellectual traditions, it discusses the significance of Sanskrit and its relationship with the regional languages of India; the relationship between Hindi and Urdu; and the role of English as a language of colonial administration and education after Independence. The study also deals with the new generation of post-Independence Indian English writers, who express a whole range of emotions, which were articulated through the vernacular in the colonial period. It explores the representation of Indian identities—Hindu and Muslim—through Hindi films and also looks into the role of Hindi television programmes in construction of national and regional identities. The authors examine the problems of creating a national identity; the rise of Hindu politics in the 1990s; and Hindu–Muslim relations in the context of religious reform and political loyalty to the nation-state. They also analyse the relationship of the Indian diaspora with the motherland and the host country. Going beyond conventional boundaries of nation-states, academic disciplines, and conceptual categories, this interdisciplinary book will aid those embarking on a ‘new’ discovery of India.
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