Other Tongues

Rethinking the Language Debates in India

Series: 

Volume Editors: and
Other Tongues: Rethinking the Language Debates in India explores the implications of the energetic and, at times, acrimonious public debate among Indian authors and academics over the hegemonic role of Indian writing in English. From the 1960s the debate in India has centered on the role of the English language in perpetuating and maintaining the cultural and ideological aspects of imperialism. The debate received renewed attention following controversial claims by Salman Rushdie and V.S. Naipaul on the inferior status of contemporary Indian-language literatures.
This volume :
• offers nuanced analysis of the language, audience and canon debate;
• provides a multivocal debate in which academics, writers and publishers are brought together in a multi-genre format (academic essay, interview, personal essay);
• explores how translation mediates this debate and the complex choices that translation must entail.
Other Tongues is the first collective study by to bring together voices from differing national, linguistic and professional contexts in an examination of the nuances of this debate over language. By creating dialogue between different stakeholders – seven scholars, three writers, and three publishers from India – the volume brings to the forefront underrepresented aspects of Indian literary culture.

Prices from (excl. shipping):

€84.40€80.00 excl. VAT
Add to Cart
Preliminary Material
Editor(s): Nalini Iyer and Bonnie Zare
Pages: i–xxxvii
Notes on the Contributors
Editor(s): Nalini Iyer and Bonnie Zare
Pages: 205–208
Nalini Iyer is Associate Professor of English at Seattle University. Bonnie Zare is Associate Professor of Women’s Studies at the University of Wyoming.
Contributors: Urvashi Butalia, Arnab Chakladar, Geeta Dharmarajan, Chitra Divakaruni, Mahesh Elkunchwar, Nalini Iyer, Mini Krishnan, Nina Swamidoss McConigley, Christi Ann Merrill, Josna Rege, Pradip Sen, Lavina Dhingra Shankar, S. Shankar, Anushiya Sivanarayanan and Bonnie Zare.
Acknowledgements
Bonnie ZARE and Nalini IYER: Introduction: Problematizing Indian Literary Canons
Canonizing Authors, Authorizing Canons
Nalini IYER: Embattled Canons: The Place of Diasporic Writing in Indian English Literatures
Lavina Dhingra SHANKAR: Not Too Spicy: Exotic Mistresses of Cultural Translation in the Fiction of Chitra Divakaruni and Jhumpa Lahiri
Josna REGE: Code-Switching, Shape-Shifting, Asking Different Questions: South Asian Women’s Language In and Across Nations
Mahesh ELKUNCHWAR: One Bhasha Writer’s Side of the Coin
Pradip SEN: The Last Fifty Years: A Retrospective on the Calcutta Writers Workshop
Chitra Banerjee DIVAKARUNI with Nina Swamidoss MCCONIGLEY: A South Asian American Writer’s Perspective: An Interview with Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni
Perspectives from the World Of Publishing
Urvashi BUTALIA: India: The World of Publishing and Writing in 2007
Geeta DHARMARAJAN, Rizio Yohannan RAJ and K. DHARMARAJAN: Speaking with Bonnie ZARE: Reaching New Audiences: A Conversation with Katha Press
Mini KRISHNAN with Nalini IYER: Publishing Translations: An Interview with Mini Krishnan, Oxford University Press
Translation and Transcreation
Anushiya SIVANARAYANAN: Translation and Globalization: Tamil Dalit Literature and Bama’s Karukku
S. SHANKAR: Translation and the Vernacular: The Tamil Krishna Devotional “Alaippayuthey”
S. SHANKAR Speaking with Nalini IYER: Interview
Christi A. MERRILL: Real-Life Transfers: Reading Literature Through Translation
Arnab CHAKLADAR: Meeting Online: Publishing/Discussing Translation on the Web
Notes on the Contributors
  • Collapse
  • Expand

Manufacturer information:
Koninklijke Brill B.V. 
Plantijnstraat 2
2321 JC
Leiden / The Netherlands
productsafety@degruyterbrill.com