International Journal on Multicultural Literature (IJML) Vol. 8, No. 1


Book Description

ÿInternational Journal on Multicultural Literature (IJML) Volume 8 Number 1 (January 2018) ISSN 2231-6248. Highlights include The Spectral Visions of the Menace of Capitalism Masquerading as Modernity: an Explication of Bond?sÿSummer,ÿSavedÿandÿThe Pope's Weddingÿby S. ChelliahDigital Humanities and Literary Studies: A Conceptual Study by S. KumaranThe Metaphysical Quest of Raja Rao by Ramaswamy SubramonyAn Ecofeminist Analysis of Kamala Das? Select Short Stories by Armstrong SebastianThird Gender in India: Reconfiguring Identity by Poonam WadhwaThe Negro to Black Conversion Experience in Alex Haley?s Roots by Rosebel Wilson C & Baskaran GavarappanWar and Women: Enslavement and Emancipation: New Afghan Women in Khaleid Hosseini'sÿA Thousand Splendid Sunsÿby Nirjharini TripathyMulticultural Ethnic Identity: Paradox of Being and Becoming in Malaysia in K. S. Maniam'sÿIn A Far Countryÿby A. AthiappanDevdas to Dev.D: Transformation in the Cinematic World of Devdas by Benazir Manzar & Aju AravindEmpowered Prodigious Protagonists in Paulo Coelho?s Novels by Giftsy Dorcas E. & Raichel M. SylusToni Morrison?s Paradise: A Saga of Race and Violence by Sebin JustineMasks and Masqueraders in Ramesh K. Srivastava?s Short Stories by Shipra G. VashishthaPlays of Activism: An Analysis of Badal Sircar?s Legacy by Soumitra ChakrabortyLeadership Lessons from the Life and Achievements of Kanakadasa, in Dr Basavaraj Naikar?s Kanakadasa, the Golden Servant by - Sumathi ShivakumarThe Crisis of Female Identity in the Novels of Jane Austen and Shashi Deshpande: A Comparative Study by Sweta AnandManas Bakshi?s Parnassus of Revival: A Review Article by K. RajaniThe Poetic Sensibilities of Poonam Dwivedi in The Confluence and Other Poems: An Analytical Study by Manas BakshiT. V. Reddy?s Sound and Silence: A Collection of Poems by Patricia PrimeRamesh K. Srivastava?s Road Not Taken and Other Stories by Smita IJML is a peer-reviewed research journal in English literature published from Thodupuzha, Kerala, India. The publisher and editor is Prof. Dr. K. V. Dominic, renowned English language poet, critic, short story writer and editor who has to his credit 27 books. He is also the secretary of Guild of Indian English Writers, Editors and Critics (GIEWEC). Since 2010, IJML is a biannual journal published in January and July. The articles are sent first to the referees by the editor and only if they accept, the papers will be published. Although based in India, each issue includes worldwide contributors. Although IJML concentrates on multiculturalism, it also encompasses other literature. Each issue also includes poems, short stories, review articles, book reviews, interviews, general essays etc. under separate sections. IJML is available in paperback, Kindle, ePub, and PDF editions. Distributed by Modern History Press LCO004020 LITERARY COLLECTIONS / Asian / Indic LIT008020 Literary Criticism : Asian - Indic POL035010 Political Science : Political Freedom & Security - Human Rights Learn more at www.profKVDominc.com







International Journal on Multicultural Literature (IJML) Vol. 7, No. 2


Book Description

International Journal on Multicultural Literature (IJML) Volume 7 Number 2 (July 2017)ÿISSN 2231-6248. Highlights include Solutions to Religious Communalism as Projected in Mahesh Dattani's Final Solutions: An Analysis by S. ChelliahK.V. Dominic's Winged Reason: A Portrait of Social Realism by D.C. ChambialTracing Political Bricoleurs in Winston Churchill'sÿThoughts and Adventuresÿand Khushwant Singh'sÿThe End of Indiaÿby Sreedevi R. & Raichel M. SylusPlay/Games as Sublimation of Juvenile Delinquency: An Exploration into the World of Children's Literature by Sijo VargheseIntrinsic Journey into the Epic, Savitri: A Symbolic Exploration by Santanu BasakFeminine or Feminist: Ambiguous Women in The Moor's Last Sigh by Sharmila BhattacharjeeElement of Grotesque in Carson McCullers' The Ballad of the Sad Cafe by Sarika TiwariAlec Derwent Hope on Poet and Art of Poetry by Amodini SreedharanWomen as Victims: A Study of Nalini Sharma'sÿStrange Equationsÿby S. BarathiMahesh Dattani's Final Solutions: Deconstruction of Communalism - Nidhish Kumar SinghAuthenticity of Rural Life in the Novels of Chinua Achebe, Kamala Markandaya and Ramesh K. Srivastava by Smita DasLives on Pyre: A Socio-realistic Portrayal in D.C. Chambial'sÿThe Cargoes of the Bleeding Heartsÿby Parthajit Ghosh & Madhu KamraAn Evolution of His Demography: A Socio-cultural Flow in the Fictional World of Manoj Das by Suresh Bera & Somali GuptaMaya Angelou'sÿShaker, Why Don't You Sing?: a Paroxysm of Confession by Ishita Pramanik & Shukla BanerjeeFruits of Delight in the Fields of Despair in Manas Bakshi's Dance of Satan and Other Poems by T.V. Reddy IJML is a peer-reviewed research journal in English literature published from Thodupuzha, Kerala, India. The publisher and editor is Prof. Dr. K. V. Dominic, renowned English language poet, critic, short story writer and editor who has to his credit 27 books. He is also the secretary of Guild of Indian English Writers, Editors and Critics (GIEWEC). Since 2010, IJML is a biannual journal published in January and July. The articles are sent first to the referees by the editor and only if they accept, the papers will be published. Although based in India, each issue includes worldwide contributors. Although IJML concentrates on multiculturalism, it also encompasses other literature. Each issue also includes poems, short stories, review articles, book reviews, interviews, general essays etc. under separate sections. IJML is available in paperback, Kindle, ePub, and PDF editions. Distributed by Modern History Press LCO004020 LITERARY COLLECTIONS / Asian / Indic LIT008020 Literary Criticism : Asian - Indic POL035010 Political Science : Political Freedom & Security - Human Rights Learn more at www.profKVDominc.com




Writers Editors Critics (WEC) Vol. 6, No. 2


Book Description

Writers Editors Critics (WEC) An International Biannual Refereed Journal of English Language and Literature Volume 6 Number 2 (September 2016) ISSN: 2231 ? 198X Special Issue: a tribute to Indian poet Mahasweta Devi (14 January 1926 ? 28 July 2016) A Poetic Tribute to Mahasweta Devi ÿ ÿ- K. V. Dominic Mahasweta Devi: Death cannot Claim a Valiant Soul ÿ- Ketaki Datta Mahasweta Devi: Fourth World Literature for Indigenous ÿPeople?An Obituary - Ratan Bhattacharjee Charting the ?Subaltern? Terrain?The Outsider-Insider: Mahashweta Devi?s ?Pterodactyl? in Perspective - Poonam Sahay Aarti to Maha Shakthi - P. Gopichand & P. Nagasuseela Mahasweta Devi: Voice of the Deprived Millions - Manas Bakshi The Mourners of Mahasweta Devi: A Critical Analysis of Rudali - J. Pamela The Subaltern Woman and Woman as Subaltern: A Study of 34 Selected Works of Mahasweta Devi - Anisha Ghosh (Paul) A Critical Analysis of Mahasweta Devi?s ?Bharsaa? - Ramesh Chandra Mukhopadhyaya The Plight of Tribal People in Mahasweta Devi?s ?Shishu? (Children) Writers Editors Critics (WEC) is a research journal in English literature published from Thodupuzha, Kerala, India. It is the main product of Guild of Indian English Writers, Editors and Critics (GIEWEC), a non-profit registered society of Indian English writers, English language professors as well as PhD research scholars. The publisher is hence GIEWEC itself and editor is its secretary Prof. Dr. K. V. Dominic, a renowned English language poet, critic, short story writer and editor who has to his credit 27 books. ÿIt is truly a refereed journal which has got a screening committee consisting of eminent professors. The articles are sent first to the referees by the editor and only if they accept, the papers will be published. The journal is international in the sense each issue will have contributors from outside India.ÿ The singularity or specialty of this journal is that it has no thrust area. It is hence so accommodative that it publishes papers on all types of literatures including translations from regional languages, literary theories, communicative English, ELT, linguistics etc. In addition, each issue will be rich with poems, short stories, review articles, book reviews, interviews, general essays etc. under separate sections. WEC has print version as well as kindle version. ÿ







Devdas


Book Description

One Of The Most Enduring Love Stories Of Our Times. First Published In Bengali In 1917, Saratchandra Chattopadhyay'S Tragic Tale Of Devdas Has Become Synonymous With A Passionate, Intense Love That Does Not Find Consummation. It Is The Story Of Devdas And Paro, Childhood Sweethearts Who Are Torn Apart When Devdas Is Sent Away To Calcutta By His Father, The Local Zamindar. When Devdas Returns To His Village, Now A Handsome Lad Of Nineteen, Paro Asks Him To Marry Her. But Devdas Is Unable To Stand Up To Parental Opposition To The Match And Rejects The Proposition. Stunned, Paro Agrees To Marry An Elderly Widower. Devdas Returns To Calcutta, But Every Waking Hour Of His Is Now Filled With Thoughts Of Paro And His Unfulfilled Love For Her. Desperate To Resolve The Situation Somehow, He Runs To Paro Who Is Now Married And Asks Her To Elope With Him, But She Refuses. Heartbroken, He Seeks Solace In Alcohol And In The Company Of The Courtesan Chandramukhi. Chandramukhi Falls In Love With Devdas, But Even When He Is With Her He Can Only Think Of Paro. It Is Now His Destiny To Hurtle On Relentlessly On The Path To Self-Destruction. Devdas S Tortured Life Ends When, Dying Of A Liver Ailment Brought On By Alcoholism, He Journeys To Paro S House To See Her One Last Time. Arriving In The Middle Of The Night, He Dies Unknown, Untended, On Her Doorstep. Paro Comes To Know Of His Death Only The Following Morning. Devdas Has Enthralled Readers And Filmgoing Audiences Alike For The Better Part Of A Century. This New Translation Brings The Classic Tale Of Star-Crossed Lovers Alive For A New Generation Of Readers. The Classic Novel Brought To Life In A New, Lucid, Extremely Readable Translation.







Gift In Green


Book Description

An eco-spiritual search for light and life in a world inching towards dystopia Gift in Green, written originally in Malayalam, is a tantalizingly unconventional narrative that explores, on multiple levels, the pain and poetry that eventuate from the disruption of the intimate relationship between a people and their life-world, using water (the 'water-life' of the people of Aathi) as the overarching metaphor that mirrors the degradation of the society. Between the polarities of attachment and abandonment, darkness and light, predatory progress and the sheer will to survive, unfolds the saga of a people confronted by the behemoth of progress driven by Kumaran,who seeks to abandon water-life, threatening its very existence. But such is the author's faith in the resilience of life and nature and her belief in the futility of trying to control something as fluid and eternal as water-life that what promises to be the end is also the hope of a new beginning. This is the first instance in Indian literary history of a novel in a regional language being translated and published concurrently in English.




The Significant Anthology


Book Description

The Significant Anthology contains prose pieces, autobiographical vignettes, essays, short stories and poetry. The writers range from seasoned ones to new and exciting voices brimming over with talent and gusto. A veritable feast, the book combines a plethora of themes, ideas, styles, forms and voices. Never content to be mere onlookers, poets and writers have brought in their words, rivers of sorrow and winds of gladness evincing the sense of indivisiblity of all knowledge and the sameness of the human condition everywhere. This anthology stands for peace, for the spirit of resilience and as a defiant precedent of creativity resulting from an open invitation to experiment. Pakistani and Indian, old and young, woman and man, black and white, Muslim, Hindu, Jew and Christian, and people from all professions and walks of life or ones without jobs as well as from every continent - nestle together in these pages with no wars amongst them.




Krishna Charitra


Book Description

Krishna Charitra is a famous Bengali classic where Bankim Chandra endeavours to discover Sri Krishna, the real person, behind centuries of myths and legends. Written in 1886, this was the first instance where the character of Krishna is studied from a pragmatic and questioning perspective. Like his novel Ananda Math, Krishna Charitra originates from Bankim Chandra's passionate feeling of patriotism. He wanted to uphold Sri Krishna as not just a mythological figure, but an ideal Indian character, whom other Indians could look up to. Sri Aurobindo says, Bankim Chandra poured over the Bhagavad Gita and the Vedas striving to catch the deeper and sacred sense of those profound writings. To give that to his countrymen was the strenuous aim of Krishna Charitra. In this translation of Krishna Charitra, several passages of Bankim's academic discussions have been omitted, so as to make it easier for the common reader. Also deleted are the criticisms on the European people that Bankim Chandra includes in his book from time to time. Otherwise, the text strictly follows the structure and the content of the original dissertation. #v&spublishers




Recent Books