Contradictory Indianness
eBook - ePub

Contradictory Indianness

Indenture, Creolization, and Literary Imaginary

  1. 256 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Contradictory Indianness

Indenture, Creolization, and Literary Imaginary

About this book

As Contradictory Indianness shows, a postcolonial Caribbean aesthetics that has from its inception privileged inclusivity, interraciality, and resistance against Old World colonial orders requires taking into account Indo-Caribbean writers and their reimagining of Indianness in the region. Whereas, for instance, forms of Indo-Caribbean cultural expression in music, cuisine, or religion are more readily accepted as creolizing (thus, Caribbeanizing) processes, an Indo-Caribbean literary imaginary has rarely been studied as such. Discussing the work of Ismith Khan, Harold Sonny Ladoo, Totaram Sanadhya, LalBihari Sharma, and Shani Mootoo, Contradictory Indianness maintains that the writers' engagement with the regional and transnational poetics of the Caribbean underscores symbolic bridges between cultural worlds conventionally set apart—the Africanized and Indianized—and distinguishes between cultural worlds assumed to be the same—indenture and South Asian Indianness. This book privileges Indo-Caribbean fiction as a creolizing literary imaginary to broaden its study beyond a narrow canon that has, inadvertently or not, enabled monolithic and unidimensional perceptions of Indian cultural identity and evolution in the Caribbean, and continued to impose a fragmentary and disconnected study of (post)indenture aesthetics within indenture's own transnational cartography.

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Yes, you can access Contradictory Indianness by Atreyee Phukan in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Literature & Asian Literary Criticism. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Series Page
  3. Title Page
  4. Copyright
  5. Dedication
  6. Contents
  7. Introduction
  8. 1. Indenture Passage and Poetics in Totaram Sanadhya and LalBihari Sharma
  9. 2. Repatriation and the “Indian Problem” in Ismith Khan’s The Jumbie Bird (1960)
  10. 3. The Trope of the Rice Field in Harold Sonny Ladoo’s No Pain Like This Body (1972)
  11. 4. (En)Gendering Indenture in Shani Mootoo’s Cereus Blooms at Night (1992)
  12. Conclusion
  13. Acknowledgments
  14. Notes
  15. Bibliography
  16. Index
  17. About the Author
  18. Series List