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Title Indian Genre Fiction : Pasts and Future Histories / editors, Bodhisattva Chattopadhyay, Aakriti Mandhwani, Anwesha Maity
Edition First edition
Published London : Taylor and Francis, 2018

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Description 1 online resource : text file, PDF
Contents Cover; Title; Copyright; Contents; List of contributors; Introduction: Indian genre fiction -- languages, literatures, classifications; Part I Emergence of distinctions; 1 Literary and popular fiction in late colonial Tamil Nadu; 2 Homage to a 'Magic-Writer': the Mistrīz and Asrār novels of Urdu; 3 A series of unfortunate events: natural calamities in 19th-century Bengali chapbooks; 4 Explorers of subversive knowledge: the science fantasy of Leela Majumdar and Sukumar Ray; Part II Postcolonial reassertions; 5 Hearts and homes: a perspective on women writers in Hindi
6 Genre fiction and aesthetic relish: reading rasa in contemporary times7 Community fiction: Mamang Dai's The Legends of Pensam and Temsula Ao's These Hills Called Home: Stories from a War Zone; Part III Genres in the 21st century; 8 Post-millennial 'mythology-inspired fiction' in English: the market, the genre, and the (global) reader; 9 Expanding world of Indian English fiction: The Mahabharata retold in Krishna Udayasankar's The Aryavarta Chronicles and Amruta Patil's Adi Parva; 10 When Bhimayana enters the classroom
Summary "This volume maps the breadth and domain of genre literature in India across seven languages (Tamil, Urdu, Bangla, Hindi, Odia, Marathi, English), and nine genres for the first time. Over the last few decades, detective/crime fiction and especially science fiction/fantasy have slowly made their way into university curricula and consideration by literary critics in India and the West. However, there has been no substantial study of genre fiction in the Indian languages, least of all from a comparative perspective. This volume, with contributions from leading national and international scholars, addresses this lacuna in critical scholarship and provides an overview of diverse genre fictions. Using methods from literary analysis, book history, and Indian aesthetic theories, the volume throws light on the variety of contexts in which genre literature is read, activated and used, from political debates surrounding national and regional identities to caste and class conflicts. It shows that Indian genre fiction (including pulp fiction, comics and graphic novels) transmutes across languages, time periods, in translation and through publication processes. While the book focuses on contemporary postcolonial genre literature production, it also draws connections to individual, centuries-long, literary traditions of genre literature in the Indian subcontinent. Further, it traces contested hierarchies within these languages as well as current trends in genre fiction criticism. Lucid and comprehensive, this book will be of great interest to academics, students, practitioners, literary critics and historians in the fields of postcolonialism, genre studies, global genre fiction, media and popular culture, South Asian literature, Indian literature, detective fiction, science fiction, romance, crime fiction, horror, mythology, graphic novels, comparative literature and South Asian studies. It will also appeal to the informed general reader."--Provided by publisher
Subject Indic fiction (English) -- 21st century -- History and criticism
Mythology, Indic, in literature.
LITERARY CRITICISM -- Modern -- General.
LITERARY CRITICISM -- Subjects & Themes -- General.
Indic fiction (English)
Mythology, Indic, in literature.
Genre/Form Criticism, interpretation, etc.
Form Electronic book
Author Chattopadhyay, Bodhisattva, editor
Mandhwani, Aakriti, editor
Maity, Anwesha, editor
ISBN 9780429456169
0429456166