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This volume examines the linguistic and stylistic forms of new Indian English fiction to explore the power of language to construct meaning, express identity and convey ideology and benefits from an interdisciplinary methodology to read contemporary Indian authors like Jeet Thayil, Deepa Anappara, Avni Doshi, Tabish Khair and Megha Majumdar
This volume examines the linguistic and stylistic forms of new Indian English fiction to explore the power of language to construct meaning, express identity and convey ideology and benefits from an interdisciplinary methodology to read contemporary Indian authors like Jeet Thayil, Deepa Anappara, Avni Doshi, Tabish Khair and Megha Majumdar
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Autorenporträt
Esterino Adami is an Associate Professor of English language and translation at the University of Turin, Department of Humanities, Italy. His main research areas include critical stylistics, postcolonial writing, and sociolinguistics. He has published articles and book chapters on lexical aspects of Indian English, naming and ideology in the postcolonial Indian world, metaphors for languages, the narrative rendition of specialised discourse (botany, food, the railways), and the semiotics of comics. He has authored Railway Discourse: Linguistic and Stylistic Representations of the Train in the Anglophone World (2018) and co-edited Other Worlds and the Narrative Construction of Otherness (2017, with F. Bellino and A. Mengozzi) and Within and Across: Language and Construction of Shifting Identities in Post-Colonial Contexts (2012, with A. Martelli).
Inhaltsangabe
Acknowledgements 1. Introduction 1.1 Language, Style, and Variation in Indian English Literary Texts 1.2 Aims of the Book and Case Studies 1.3 For a New Methodological Paradigm: Postcolonial Stylistics 1.4 Overview of the Book 2. Indian English across Texts and Discourses 2.1 English in/and India 2.2 Indian English(es) and Linguistic/Stylistic Variation 2.3 Literary Texts and Contemporary Indian English Authors 3. Otherness, Style and Indian English 'Decadent' Fiction 3.1 The Language of Otherness in the Postcolonial Indian World 3.2 Author, Text, and Context: Jeet Thayil 3.3 Otherness and the Construction of Drug Discourse 3.4 Of Poets, Saints, and Sinners: Indian English and Postcolonial Heteroglossia 4. The Voices of 'Lament' in Indian English Literature 4.1 Language, Lament, and Literature 4.2 Author, Text and Context: Deepa Anappara 4.3 Constructing Empathy, Irony, and Texture 4.4 Author, Text, and Context: Avni Doshi 4.5 Remembering, Forgetting: Loss, Memory, and Identity 5. Languaging the Sense(s) of Indian English Fiction 5.1 Representing the Senses in Language and Fiction 5.2 Author, Text, and Context: Tabish Khair 5.3 The Pragmatics of Senses: Embodiment, Perception, and Suspense 5.4 Author, Text, and Context: Megha Majumdar 5.5 "You smell like smoke": Language, Sense(s), and Identity 6. Conclusions 6.1 More Tools and Theories for Indian English in Fictional Texts 6.2 Further Research: Other Genres and Research Extensions Index
Acknowledgements
1. Introduction
1.1 Language, Style, and Variation in Indian English Literary Texts
1.2 Aims of the Book and Case Studies
1.3 For a New Methodological Paradigm: Postcolonial Stylistics
1.4 Overview of the Book
2. Indian English across Texts and Discourses
2.1 English in/and India
2.2 Indian English(es) and Linguistic/Stylistic Variation
2.3 Literary Texts and Contemporary Indian English Authors
3. Otherness, Style and Indian English 'Decadent' Fiction
3.1 The Language of Otherness in the Postcolonial Indian World
3.2 Author, Text, and Context: Jeet Thayil
3.3 Otherness and the Construction of Drug Discourse
3.4 Of Poets, Saints, and Sinners: Indian English and Postcolonial Heteroglossia
4. The Voices of 'Lament' in Indian English Literature
4.1 Language, Lament, and Literature
4.2 Author, Text and Context: Deepa Anappara
4.3 Constructing Empathy, Irony, and Texture
4.4 Author, Text, and Context: Avni Doshi
4.5 Remembering, Forgetting: Loss, Memory, and Identity
5. Languaging the Sense(s) of Indian English Fiction
5.1 Representing the Senses in Language and Fiction
5.2 Author, Text, and Context: Tabish Khair
5.3 The Pragmatics of Senses: Embodiment, Perception, and Suspense
5.4 Author, Text, and Context: Megha Majumdar
5.5 "You smell like smoke": Language, Sense(s), and Identity
6. Conclusions
6.1 More Tools and Theories for Indian English in Fictional Texts
6.2 Further Research: Other Genres and Research Extensions
Acknowledgements 1. Introduction 1.1 Language, Style, and Variation in Indian English Literary Texts 1.2 Aims of the Book and Case Studies 1.3 For a New Methodological Paradigm: Postcolonial Stylistics 1.4 Overview of the Book 2. Indian English across Texts and Discourses 2.1 English in/and India 2.2 Indian English(es) and Linguistic/Stylistic Variation 2.3 Literary Texts and Contemporary Indian English Authors 3. Otherness, Style and Indian English 'Decadent' Fiction 3.1 The Language of Otherness in the Postcolonial Indian World 3.2 Author, Text, and Context: Jeet Thayil 3.3 Otherness and the Construction of Drug Discourse 3.4 Of Poets, Saints, and Sinners: Indian English and Postcolonial Heteroglossia 4. The Voices of 'Lament' in Indian English Literature 4.1 Language, Lament, and Literature 4.2 Author, Text and Context: Deepa Anappara 4.3 Constructing Empathy, Irony, and Texture 4.4 Author, Text, and Context: Avni Doshi 4.5 Remembering, Forgetting: Loss, Memory, and Identity 5. Languaging the Sense(s) of Indian English Fiction 5.1 Representing the Senses in Language and Fiction 5.2 Author, Text, and Context: Tabish Khair 5.3 The Pragmatics of Senses: Embodiment, Perception, and Suspense 5.4 Author, Text, and Context: Megha Majumdar 5.5 "You smell like smoke": Language, Sense(s), and Identity 6. Conclusions 6.1 More Tools and Theories for Indian English in Fictional Texts 6.2 Further Research: Other Genres and Research Extensions Index
Acknowledgements
1. Introduction
1.1 Language, Style, and Variation in Indian English Literary Texts
1.2 Aims of the Book and Case Studies
1.3 For a New Methodological Paradigm: Postcolonial Stylistics
1.4 Overview of the Book
2. Indian English across Texts and Discourses
2.1 English in/and India
2.2 Indian English(es) and Linguistic/Stylistic Variation
2.3 Literary Texts and Contemporary Indian English Authors
3. Otherness, Style and Indian English 'Decadent' Fiction
3.1 The Language of Otherness in the Postcolonial Indian World
3.2 Author, Text, and Context: Jeet Thayil
3.3 Otherness and the Construction of Drug Discourse
3.4 Of Poets, Saints, and Sinners: Indian English and Postcolonial Heteroglossia
4. The Voices of 'Lament' in Indian English Literature
4.1 Language, Lament, and Literature
4.2 Author, Text and Context: Deepa Anappara
4.3 Constructing Empathy, Irony, and Texture
4.4 Author, Text, and Context: Avni Doshi
4.5 Remembering, Forgetting: Loss, Memory, and Identity
5. Languaging the Sense(s) of Indian English Fiction
5.1 Representing the Senses in Language and Fiction
5.2 Author, Text, and Context: Tabish Khair
5.3 The Pragmatics of Senses: Embodiment, Perception, and Suspense
5.4 Author, Text, and Context: Megha Majumdar
5.5 "You smell like smoke": Language, Sense(s), and Identity
6. Conclusions
6.1 More Tools and Theories for Indian English in Fictional Texts
6.2 Further Research: Other Genres and Research Extensions
Index
Rezensionen
"Esterino Adami's book offers a fresh and compelling account of what he terms as 'postcolonial stylistics', essential for examining the linguistic representation of identity, society, and culture in contemporary Indian Writing in English. It is a well-researched book and will add to the existing scholarship on IWE and postcolonial studies."
Om Prakash Dwivedi, Bennett University, India
"At last, a volume that takes equally seriously the linguistic content and literary criticism in recent Indian writing! Adami has taken on the challenge of the new postcolonial stylistics, and combines many different tools of the trade to give us in-depth analyses."
Peter K. W. Tan, National University of Singapore, Singapore
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