Grey Areas
Price: 850.00 INR
ISBN:
9780195689587
Publication date:
03/02/2010
Hardback
288 pages
Price: 850.00 INR
ISBN:
9780195689587
Publication date:
03/02/2010
Hardback
288 pages
Ira Raja
Suitable for: Anybody interested in South Asia, its literature, culture, and society, as also scholars of gerontology.
Rights: World Rights
Ira Raja
Description
This volume brings together, for the first time, an extensive collection of writings on ageing from a range of Indian languages. From the abandoned old woman in Krishna Baldev Vaid’s play who becomes Mother India, to the ageing female beggar in Kolatkar’s poem who forces the almsgiver to confront her abjection, and in the process, his own, to the ninety-one-year-old man in Chaman Nahal’s story who returns to his old haveli as if he were finding his way back to the womb, this anthology presents us with the myriad ways in which contemporary Indian writers have explored the themes of ageing and the end of life. The stories, poems, and plays included here not only illustrate the importance of narrative as a means of understanding the experience of growing old, but also the complex and contested nature of age as a category of identity. Contributors include Bibhutibhushan Bandyopadhyay • Abdul Bismillah • Buddhadeva Bose • Upamanyu Chatterjee • Dilip Chitre • Ismat Chughtai • Ajeet Cour • Dhoomil • S. Diwakar • Amitav Ghosh • S.R. Harnot • T. Janakiraman • Girish Karnad • Arun Kolatkar • Bijay Prasad Mahapatra • and others
Ira Raja
Ira Raja
Description
This volume brings together, for the first time, an extensive collection of writings on ageing from a range of Indian languages. From the abandoned old woman in Krishna Baldev Vaid’s play who becomes Mother India, to the ageing female beggar in Kolatkar’s poem who forces the almsgiver to confront her abjection, and in the process, his own, to the ninety-one-year-old man in Chaman Nahal’s story who returns to his old haveli as if he were finding his way back to the womb, this anthology presents us with the myriad ways in which contemporary Indian writers have explored the themes of ageing and the end of life. The stories, poems, and plays included here not only illustrate the importance of narrative as a means of understanding the experience of growing old, but also the complex and contested nature of age as a category of identity. Contributors include Bibhutibhushan Bandyopadhyay • Abdul Bismillah • Buddhadeva Bose • Upamanyu Chatterjee • Dilip Chitre • Ismat Chughtai • Ajeet Cour • Dhoomil • S. Diwakar • Amitav Ghosh • S.R. Harnot • T. Janakiraman • Girish Karnad • Arun Kolatkar • Bijay Prasad Mahapatra • and others
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