Description

Book Synopsis

Literature from the Peripheries: Refrigerated Culture and Pluralism is a collection of chapters dealing with multiple minority cultures from all over the world. The book examines the status of several less known cultures or cultural communities which exist in the peripheries of space and time. In addition to this, the arguments and the discourses running through chapters prove the need of cultural diversity and pluralism. This well-thought and critically written book is a clarion call for humanity to look over the shoulder and see the ghost of civilization receding farther away. The book will interest the readers, scholars, practitioners, and activists who like to explore several cultures and cultural conflicts.



Trade Review

Literature from the Peripheries is a must read for anyone interested in minority cultures and communities globally. The essays are in depth and cover diverse topics making the Book extremely relevant for all Postcolonial scholars.

-- Dr. Nandini C. Sen, Noted Academic and Author of the bestselling book The Second Wife and Other Stories

This book is a timely intervention into the facets of marginalized literature with its emphasis on postcolonial Indian literature. It provides a brilliant study of texts and the thirteen chapters give an insight into a broad spectrum of theoretical and historical issues of marginal literature. This book provides an astute revelation on the discourse of marginality and will be of interest to scholars and students.

-- Neepa Sarkar, Mount Carmel College

Literature from the Peripheries is a well-researched book articulating the need for cultural renaissance and inclusive cultural ecosystem in a liberal democracy like that of India. The book has done justice in navigating the literature of the various ethnic communities which are written both in English as well as in native languages. What is most remarkable about the book is that, it has tried to bring to the fore the ‘English’ that communities in India and in various parts of the world write with offering a wide scope to understand the dichotomous relationship that emerges out of language differences between people and becomes an overpowering reason for social exclusion. The book rightly, vocalizes the need for appreciating differences to know the richness with which the world is inhabited.

-- Dr. Anusuya A. Paul, Translator of Urukha (Assamese play by Karuna Deka) published by Sahitya Akademi.

Table of Contents

Introduction, Anjum Khan and Shubhanku Kochar

Chapter One: Colonial Encounters and Cultural Genocide: A Postcolonial Textualisation of Ferdinand Leopold Oyono’s The Old Man and the Medal, Zuhmboshi Eric Nsuh

Chapter Two: The Anglo Indian Community and its Cultural Aporia: Reading the Works of Allan Sealy’s The Trotter-Nama: A Chronicle, Medha Bhadra Chowdhury

Chapter Three: The Traces of Dystopian in Post Independent Manipuri Poetry, Neelima B and Saji Mathew

Chapter Four: Cultural Refrigeration through Cinema in the age of Globalization: From Hollywood to Nollywood, Stephen Ogheneruro Okpadah

Chapter Five: Subaltern Cosmopolitanism- The ‘Parankis’ of Postcolonial Kochi, Anupama Nayar

Chapter Six: Unseen, Unheard and Unacknowledged: An Eco-Cultural Reading of Benyamin's Goat Days in the Age of the Anthropocene, Risha Baruah

Chapter Seven: The Idea of Minor Literature by Deleuze and Guattari with reference to Naga Identity, Psyche and Victimization of Indigenous Communities in Temsula Ao’s These Hills Called Home: Stories From A War Zone, Sindhura Dutta and Asijit Datta

Chapter Eight: The Influence of West Indian Cultural Values on Collective and Individual Identities in Brown Girl, Brownstones and Praisesong for the Widow, Renée Latchman

Chapter Nine: Mainstreaming the Marginal: Cultural Extermination and Tribal Resistance in Ranendra’s Lords of the Global Village (2017), Asis De

Chapter Ten: Passing and Caribbean Identity in America in No Telephone to Heaven by Michelle Cliff, Denise M. Jarrett

Chapter Eleven: ‘American Dream Versus Nightmare’: Migration, Minority Culture and Magic in Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni’s The Mistress of Spices, Munira Salim

Chapter Twelve: Colouring Culture, Cosmopolitanizing Identity: Shades of ‘Otherness’ in Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s Americanah, Maitrayee Misra

Chapter Thirteen: Passing: Trauma and Technique An inquisitive reading of Nella Larsen’s Quicksand and Passing, Prachi Behrani and Vinaya Kumari

About the Contributors

Literature from the Peripheries: Refrigerated

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    A Hardback by Anjum Khan, Shubhanku Kochar, Prachi Behrani

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      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 15/02/2023
      ISBN13: 9781666927535, 978-1666927535
      ISBN10: 1666927538

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Literature from the Peripheries: Refrigerated Culture and Pluralism is a collection of chapters dealing with multiple minority cultures from all over the world. The book examines the status of several less known cultures or cultural communities which exist in the peripheries of space and time. In addition to this, the arguments and the discourses running through chapters prove the need of cultural diversity and pluralism. This well-thought and critically written book is a clarion call for humanity to look over the shoulder and see the ghost of civilization receding farther away. The book will interest the readers, scholars, practitioners, and activists who like to explore several cultures and cultural conflicts.



      Trade Review

      Literature from the Peripheries is a must read for anyone interested in minority cultures and communities globally. The essays are in depth and cover diverse topics making the Book extremely relevant for all Postcolonial scholars.

      -- Dr. Nandini C. Sen, Noted Academic and Author of the bestselling book The Second Wife and Other Stories

      This book is a timely intervention into the facets of marginalized literature with its emphasis on postcolonial Indian literature. It provides a brilliant study of texts and the thirteen chapters give an insight into a broad spectrum of theoretical and historical issues of marginal literature. This book provides an astute revelation on the discourse of marginality and will be of interest to scholars and students.

      -- Neepa Sarkar, Mount Carmel College

      Literature from the Peripheries is a well-researched book articulating the need for cultural renaissance and inclusive cultural ecosystem in a liberal democracy like that of India. The book has done justice in navigating the literature of the various ethnic communities which are written both in English as well as in native languages. What is most remarkable about the book is that, it has tried to bring to the fore the ‘English’ that communities in India and in various parts of the world write with offering a wide scope to understand the dichotomous relationship that emerges out of language differences between people and becomes an overpowering reason for social exclusion. The book rightly, vocalizes the need for appreciating differences to know the richness with which the world is inhabited.

      -- Dr. Anusuya A. Paul, Translator of Urukha (Assamese play by Karuna Deka) published by Sahitya Akademi.

      Table of Contents

      Introduction, Anjum Khan and Shubhanku Kochar

      Chapter One: Colonial Encounters and Cultural Genocide: A Postcolonial Textualisation of Ferdinand Leopold Oyono’s The Old Man and the Medal, Zuhmboshi Eric Nsuh

      Chapter Two: The Anglo Indian Community and its Cultural Aporia: Reading the Works of Allan Sealy’s The Trotter-Nama: A Chronicle, Medha Bhadra Chowdhury

      Chapter Three: The Traces of Dystopian in Post Independent Manipuri Poetry, Neelima B and Saji Mathew

      Chapter Four: Cultural Refrigeration through Cinema in the age of Globalization: From Hollywood to Nollywood, Stephen Ogheneruro Okpadah

      Chapter Five: Subaltern Cosmopolitanism- The ‘Parankis’ of Postcolonial Kochi, Anupama Nayar

      Chapter Six: Unseen, Unheard and Unacknowledged: An Eco-Cultural Reading of Benyamin's Goat Days in the Age of the Anthropocene, Risha Baruah

      Chapter Seven: The Idea of Minor Literature by Deleuze and Guattari with reference to Naga Identity, Psyche and Victimization of Indigenous Communities in Temsula Ao’s These Hills Called Home: Stories From A War Zone, Sindhura Dutta and Asijit Datta

      Chapter Eight: The Influence of West Indian Cultural Values on Collective and Individual Identities in Brown Girl, Brownstones and Praisesong for the Widow, Renée Latchman

      Chapter Nine: Mainstreaming the Marginal: Cultural Extermination and Tribal Resistance in Ranendra’s Lords of the Global Village (2017), Asis De

      Chapter Ten: Passing and Caribbean Identity in America in No Telephone to Heaven by Michelle Cliff, Denise M. Jarrett

      Chapter Eleven: ‘American Dream Versus Nightmare’: Migration, Minority Culture and Magic in Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni’s The Mistress of Spices, Munira Salim

      Chapter Twelve: Colouring Culture, Cosmopolitanizing Identity: Shades of ‘Otherness’ in Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s Americanah, Maitrayee Misra

      Chapter Thirteen: Passing: Trauma and Technique An inquisitive reading of Nella Larsen’s Quicksand and Passing, Prachi Behrani and Vinaya Kumari

      About the Contributors

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