Shakespeare and Indian Nationalism aims to articulate the reception of Shakespeare by the 19th century Indian intelligentsia from Bengal and their ambivalent approach to the Indian Renaissance and consequent nationalist project.
Shakespeare and Indian Nationalism aims to articulate the reception of Shakespeare by the 19th century Indian intelligentsia from Bengal and their ambivalent approach to the Indian Renaissance and consequent nationalist project.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Manojit Mandal is a Professor of English at Jadavpur University and at present the Chair of the department. He has published several articles in various national/international journals and books in the fields of Shakespeare, postcolonial theory, Shakespeare in Bengal, Tagore, and disability studies. He has published two books in the area of disability studies and higher education in India. He is also the Joint Coordinator, Centre for Studies in Cultural Diversity and Wellbeing, JU, and is the Principal Investigator on two UGC-RUSAII projects on Tagore, transnationalism, and global south.
Inhaltsangabe
1. Introduction: Beginning of Shakespeare Study in India 2. Imperfect Interfaces: Vidyasagar Hemchandra Girishchandra and Their Shakespeare 3. Raging the Storm: Bankimchandra Rabindranath and The Tempest 4. Murders in Shakespeare: Othello and a Forgotten Native 5. Weight of this sad time...: King Lear and the Fear of the Raj? 6. And the Bard Raj continues...: Nationalism Shakespeare and Postcolonial India
Introduction: Beginning of Shakespeare Study in India
Imperfect Interfaces: Vidyasagar, Hemchandra, Girishchandra, and Their Shakespeare
Raging the Storm: Bankimchandra, Rabindranath, and The Tempest
Murders in Shakespeare: Othello and a Forgotten Native
Weight of this sad time...: King Lear and the Fear of the Raj?
And the Bard Raj continues...: Nationalism, Shakespeare, and Postcolonial India
1. Introduction: Beginning of Shakespeare Study in India 2. Imperfect Interfaces: Vidyasagar Hemchandra Girishchandra and Their Shakespeare 3. Raging the Storm: Bankimchandra Rabindranath and The Tempest 4. Murders in Shakespeare: Othello and a Forgotten Native 5. Weight of this sad time...: King Lear and the Fear of the Raj? 6. And the Bard Raj continues...: Nationalism Shakespeare and Postcolonial India
Introduction: Beginning of Shakespeare Study in India
Imperfect Interfaces: Vidyasagar, Hemchandra, Girishchandra, and Their Shakespeare
Raging the Storm: Bankimchandra, Rabindranath, and The Tempest
Murders in Shakespeare: Othello and a Forgotten Native
Weight of this sad time...: King Lear and the Fear of the Raj?
And the Bard Raj continues...: Nationalism, Shakespeare, and Postcolonial India
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