Description

Book Synopsis


Trade Review
Writing Resistance is an original and timely contribution to scholarship on Hindi literature, modern Indian literature and Dalit studies. The work is well researched, using a judicious combination of Hindi and English sources and provides, for the first time in English, an overview of the central concerns of Hindi Dalit literature as both a political and aesthetic movement. -- Allison Busch, Columbia University Brueck's incisive book richly maps the multiple layers of print, public, and cultural performance of a Hindi Dalit countersphere in contemporary India. She provides new perspectives on the processes by which Hindi Dalit authors have been negotiating and reclaiming authority over literary spaces, its boundaries, and the power of representation. Her work documents a complex collage of the diverse, fractured, and distinct Dalit literary lineage in Hindi. -- Charu Gupta, University of Delhi The search for a scholarly, perceptive and timely interpretation of what is going on in the world of Hindi Dalit literature ends right here. In a wide-ranging investigation of origins, motivations and genres, Laura Brueck addresses the fundamental questions of what makes this literature Dalit, and what makes it literary; her fine book offers a sympathetic and yet penetrating guide to a vivacious new canon of Hindi prose. -- Rupert Snell, University of Texas at Austin A welcome addition to the corpus of Dalit Studies, South Asian Studies, Cultural Studies, Postcolonial Studies, Comparative Literature, and World Literature. -- Juned Shaikh South Asian History and Culture

Table of Contents
Acknowledgments A Note on Transliteration Introduction Part 1. Mapping the Hindi Dalit Literary Sphere 1. The Hindi Dalit Counterpublic 2. The Problem of Premchand 3. Hindi Dalit Literary Criticism Part 2. Reading Hindi Dalit Literature 4. Good Dalits and Bad Brahmins 5. Dialect and Dialogue in the Margins 6. Alienation and Loss in the Dalit Experience of Modernity 7. Re-scripting Rape Conclusion Notes Bibliography Index

Writing Resistance

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    A Paperback / softback by Laura R. Brueck

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      Publisher: Columbia University Press
      Publication Date: Publication Date: 27/05/2014
      ISBN13: 9780231166058, 978-0231166058
      ISBN10: 0231166052
      Also in:
      Films, cinema

      Description

      Book Synopsis


      Trade Review
      Writing Resistance is an original and timely contribution to scholarship on Hindi literature, modern Indian literature and Dalit studies. The work is well researched, using a judicious combination of Hindi and English sources and provides, for the first time in English, an overview of the central concerns of Hindi Dalit literature as both a political and aesthetic movement. -- Allison Busch, Columbia University Brueck's incisive book richly maps the multiple layers of print, public, and cultural performance of a Hindi Dalit countersphere in contemporary India. She provides new perspectives on the processes by which Hindi Dalit authors have been negotiating and reclaiming authority over literary spaces, its boundaries, and the power of representation. Her work documents a complex collage of the diverse, fractured, and distinct Dalit literary lineage in Hindi. -- Charu Gupta, University of Delhi The search for a scholarly, perceptive and timely interpretation of what is going on in the world of Hindi Dalit literature ends right here. In a wide-ranging investigation of origins, motivations and genres, Laura Brueck addresses the fundamental questions of what makes this literature Dalit, and what makes it literary; her fine book offers a sympathetic and yet penetrating guide to a vivacious new canon of Hindi prose. -- Rupert Snell, University of Texas at Austin A welcome addition to the corpus of Dalit Studies, South Asian Studies, Cultural Studies, Postcolonial Studies, Comparative Literature, and World Literature. -- Juned Shaikh South Asian History and Culture

      Table of Contents
      Acknowledgments A Note on Transliteration Introduction Part 1. Mapping the Hindi Dalit Literary Sphere 1. The Hindi Dalit Counterpublic 2. The Problem of Premchand 3. Hindi Dalit Literary Criticism Part 2. Reading Hindi Dalit Literature 4. Good Dalits and Bad Brahmins 5. Dialect and Dialogue in the Margins 6. Alienation and Loss in the Dalit Experience of Modernity 7. Re-scripting Rape Conclusion Notes Bibliography Index

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