Literary India: Comparative Studies in Aesthetics, Colonialism, and CulturePatrick Colm Hogan, Lalita Pandit SUNY Press, 01.01.1995 - 289 Seiten This anthology explores the possibilities of a non-Eurocentric comparative literature. Contributors explain and analyze a variety of material from the Indian literary tradition, examining both its indigenous development and its relations with the West. In doing this, they draw upon and develop ideas from cultural criticism, literary theory, linguistics, and Indology. This book begins with an examination of Indian and Western views on basic concerns of literary theory and aesthetics: authorship, genre, and literary language. Specific works of Indian literature are discussed, as are the striking similarities between eighth-century Sanskrit romances and Shakespeare's late plays; the indirect links of Asian folk and popular dramatic traditions with Bertolt Brecht's epic theater; the oppositional parallelism that marks Kipling's Kim and Tagore's Gora; the suggestive variations on the theme of exile in contemporary Indian cinema and Sophocles' Theban plays. The book ends with a re-consideration of post-colonial theory drawing on both Indian and European sources. |
Inhalt
The Bias | 1 |
Theorizing Cultural Difference and CrossCultural | 45 |
The Genre Theory in Sanskrit Poetics | 63 |
Language as | 81 |
Interpreting Cultural Difference and CrossCultural | 101 |
Rays Devi | 135 |
The Poetics of Exile and the Politics of Home | 141 |
Anita Desai | 153 |
Translating Indian Literary Texts into English | 175 |
Nautanki and the Struggle for Independence National | 189 |
History and Dialectic | 207 |
Theorizing Colonial Contact Hybrid Identities | 235 |
Culture State and the Rediscovery of Indian Politics | 255 |
Notes on Contributors | 275 |
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Literary India: Comparative Studies in Aesthetics, Colonialism, and Culture Patrick Colm Hogan,Lalita Pandit Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 1995 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Abhinavagupta aesthetic Anandavardhana Aristotle Ashis Nandy audience Bengali Bhabha Bhartrihari Bhavabhūti's Binoy Brahman Brahmo Samaj Brahmobandhab Brecht causal character colonial concept context criticism culture culture-oriented death Delhi dharma divine Doya drama Duşyanta English epic essay example faith fiction genre goddess Gora Gora's Hawley Hindu Hinduism human identity ideology imperialist Indian literature individual Kālidāsa Kāma kind king Kipling Lalita Pandit language linguistic literal literary living Locana Mahābhārata meaning modern mother myth narrative Nautanki novel Oedipus original play poem poet poetic poetry political polysemy postcolonial prose Rāma Rāma's Rāmāyaṇa rasa Ravidās readers reference Śakuntalā Sanskrit sexual Shakespeare Sītā Sītā's Śiva social society specific Śrī Kṛṣṇa story structure Sucharita Tagore Tagore's theater theory tion tradition tragedy tragic trans translation ture University Press Uttararāmacarita verse West Western wife Winter's Tale woman women word writing York