In Another Country : Colonialism, Culture, and the English Novel in India
معرفی کتاب «In Another Country : Colonialism, Culture, and the English Novel in India» نوشتهٔ Priya Joshi، منتشرشده توسط نشر Columbia University Press در سال 2002. این کتاب در فرمت pdf، زبان انگلیسی ارائه شده است.
asking What Indian Readers Chose To Read And Why, in Another Country Shows How Readers Of The English Novel Transformed The Literary And Cultural Influences Of Empire. She Further Demonstrates How Indian Novelists Writing In English, From Krupa Satthianadhan To Salman Rushdie, Took An Alien Form In An Alien Language And Used It To Address Local Needs. Taken Together In This Manner, Reading And Writing Reveal The Complex Ways In Which Culture Is Continually Translated And Transformed In A Colonial And Postcolonial Context.
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the Seething Of Print And Textuality In India During The 1970s Was One Inspiration For Joshi's Interest, And The Other Was The Manner In Which Indian Writer Claimed The English Novel And Produced It To Their Own Ends Once They Began Writing Anglophone Novels In The Final Decades Of The 19th Century. She Examines Two Episodes In The Making Of The English Novel In India: The Indian Consumption Of Fiction During The 19th Century, And The Production Of Novels In The Late 19th And 20th Centuries. The Study Is Revised From Her 1995 Doctoral Dissertation For Columbia University. Annotation C. Book News, Inc., Portland, Or (booknews.com)
Contents 8 List of Illustrations and Tables 10 Acknowledgments 12 Preface 16 PART 1: Consuming Fiction 24 1. The Poetical Economy of Consumption 26 2. The Circulation of Fiction in Indian Libraries, ca. 1835-1901 58 3. Readers Write Back: THe Macmillan Colonial Library in India 116 PART 2: Consuming Fiction 162 4. By Way of Transition: Bankim's Will, or Indigenizing the Novel in India 164 5. Reforming the Novel: Krupa Satthianadhan, the Woman Who Did 195 6. The Exile at Home: Ahmed Ali’s Twilight in Delhi 228 7. The Other Modernism, or The Family Romance in English 251 Notes 286 Bibliography 324 Index 370 Priya Joshi demonstrates how a paradoxical legacy has shaped the works of Indian writers such as Krupa Satthianadhan, Ahmed Ali and Salman Rushdie, a process she calls the "indigenization" of the English novel.