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£72.99

Postcolonialism, Folklore, Nation, Gender and Indian Writing in English

£72.99

This book investigates how myth and folklore in Indian fiction are paradoxically used to generate new modes of writing. It explores this stylistic innovation, the use of an 'oral narrative style', and the relationship between women and folklore in South Asian tradition.

This book provides a detailed analysis of the use of myth and folklore in Indian fiction written in English from 1930 to 1961 and investigates…
£72.99
£72.99
1-0364-5773-7 , , ,
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This book provides a detailed analysis of the use of myth and folklore in Indian fiction written in English from 1930 to 1961 and investigates their significance as a tool for stylistic experimentation and innovation. Paradoxically, ancient myths and folktales are recovered and deployed in the novels in order to generate new modes of writing. While focusing on this central but hitherto ignored area of folklore, the book thus recovers the literary as well as the oral traditions of early Indian fiction written in English. There are two dimensions to the author’s inquiry. First, through a series of close readings, the author investigates how the use of myths, folk tales, songs and proverbs helps to evoke, dramatise or even ironise–in terms of both theme and structure–complex situations within the text. Second, the author pays special attention to the employment of an &8216;oral narrative style&8217; in some of these novels. The book also explores the relationship between women and folklore in order to understand the representation of women in South Asian folk tradition, and examines their participation in the various genres of folklore: songs, tales, and rituals.

Shruti Amar is Assistant Professor of English at Kalinga Institute of Industrial Technology, India. She received her PhD from King’s College London, UK, in 2018. Her research interests include bhakti tradition in South Asia, gender studies and folklore. She has published research articles in a wide range of journals including Interventions: Journal of Postcolonial Studies and Dialogos.

Hardback

  • ISBN: 1-0364-5773-7
  • ISBN13: 978-1-0364-5773-0

Subject Codes:

  • BIC: DSBH5, JFHF, JFSJ1
  • THEMA: DSBH5, JBGB, JBSF1
204
  • "In this monograph, Shruti Amar recovers the substantial tradition of Indian folklore and oral literature and demonstrates, through a series of closely-argued chapters, their intertwined presence in Indian writing in English – as influence, allusion, metaphor, image, or structure of feeling. In the process, she also sheds insights into the minutiae of caste, gender and nationalist politics. Meticulously researched and a labour of love, this is an important and original contribution to the history of the Indian novel in English as well as to postcolonial literary studies."
    - Santanu Das, Professor at All Souls College, University of Oxford, UK.

Meet The Author