SAIKAT GUHA | Cooch Behar Panchanan Barma University (original) (raw)

SAIKAT GUHA

Address: http://songofmuse.wordpress.com

less

Uploads

Papers by SAIKAT GUHA

Research paper thumbnail of Election and Media: (Mis)representing Democracy in India

Research paper thumbnail of " Rudali " (Mahasweta Devi) : Men, Women and the Politics of Crying

Research paper thumbnail of Wole Soyinka’s Re-deployment of Yoruba Folklore in The Strong Breed

Research paper thumbnail of When Evil Triumphs over Innocence: Revisiting Golding's Fallen World in Lord of the Flies and The Inheritors

Research paper thumbnail of Kynpham Sing Nongkynrih's Times Barter: Haiku and Senryu (Book Review)

Research paper thumbnail of Song of the Caged Bird: Maya Angelou’s Resistance to Racism and Sexism in Her Poetry

Research paper thumbnail of From Bethlehem to Byzantium: Utopian Journey of Yeats

Research paper thumbnail of The Space of Subaltern India Women: A Study on Mahasweta Devi's Three Stories

Research paper thumbnail of Writing the Body - “Summer in Calcutta” as Écriture Féminine

A study of Indian poet Kamala Das's poem “Summer in Calcutta” from feminist perspectives (especia... more A study of Indian poet Kamala Das's poem “Summer in Calcutta” from feminist perspectives (especially Helen Cixous's Écriture Féminine).

Research paper thumbnail of Colours of Blackness - Soyinka’s Telephonic Mimicry

A study of Wole Soyinka's poem "Telephone Conversation" from the perspective of Homi K Bhabha (po... more A study of Wole Soyinka's poem "Telephone Conversation" from the perspective of Homi K Bhabha (postcolonial mimicry and its subversive potential).

Research paper thumbnail of Professor Shonku and His World of Science - Satyajit Ray’s Brilliant Science Fiction (SF)

Research paper thumbnail of The Question of Violence and Vitality in the Poetry of Ted Hughes

Research paper thumbnail of A Search for the Lost Root--Bangladeshi Migration and Communal Disharmony, Diaspora Identity and Elements of Nostalgia in Taslima Nasreen's Pherā

Research paper thumbnail of Towards a Poetics of Reconstruction--Reading and Enacting Identity in Kynpham Sing Nongkynrih's Poetry

Research paper thumbnail of Plato Reflected in Tennyson’s Mirror

Books by SAIKAT GUHA

Research paper thumbnail of Multicoloured Glass: Studies on Indian Short Stories (Edited Book)

The Indian short story is not merely a derivative of the Western genre, but owes much to the grea... more The Indian short story is not merely a derivative of the Western genre, but owes much to the great story-telling tradition of Indian antiquity. The mythical and legendary tales as well as folktales have provided a fertile soil for the modern Indian short story to germinate. Beginning towards the end of the nineteenth century, the Indian short story flourished in the twentieth century. It became evident by the end of the past century that the canon is attuned to Indian landscape whose heterogeneous people and their diverse experiences it reflects so faithfully. The Indian short story as a distinct genre resembles a “multicoloured glass” scattering myriad hues which is analogous to the diversity of our country itself. The variegated and unbeaten genre righteously deserves critical attention which it has been deprived of.

With twenty-seven scholarly articles by academics, professors and researchers, the present critical volume is a tribute to an affluent but neglected genre of Indian literature. In accord with the genre itself, the scope of the book allows for such diversity as the classic writers like Tagore and Manto; the feminist writers like Ismat Chughtai, Kamala Das, Shashi Deshpande and Indira Goswami; the dalit writers like Bama and Ajay Navaria; the diaspora writers like Bharati Mukherjee and Jhumpa Lahiri. The reworking of myth by Mahasweta Devi, the nature lore of Ruskin Bond, the saga of exile by the Kashmiri Pandits, the satire of Hari Shankar Parsai, the macabre tales of Satyajit Ray, the problematics of identity in Manoj Das and memory in Temsula Ao—all are taken into consideration within the structure of a single volume to make this a stimulating overview for students and scholars of Indian literature.

Research paper thumbnail of Election and Media: (Mis)representing Democracy in India

Research paper thumbnail of " Rudali " (Mahasweta Devi) : Men, Women and the Politics of Crying

Research paper thumbnail of Wole Soyinka’s Re-deployment of Yoruba Folklore in The Strong Breed

Research paper thumbnail of When Evil Triumphs over Innocence: Revisiting Golding's Fallen World in Lord of the Flies and The Inheritors

Research paper thumbnail of Kynpham Sing Nongkynrih's Times Barter: Haiku and Senryu (Book Review)

Research paper thumbnail of Song of the Caged Bird: Maya Angelou’s Resistance to Racism and Sexism in Her Poetry

Research paper thumbnail of From Bethlehem to Byzantium: Utopian Journey of Yeats

Research paper thumbnail of The Space of Subaltern India Women: A Study on Mahasweta Devi's Three Stories

Research paper thumbnail of Writing the Body - “Summer in Calcutta” as Écriture Féminine

A study of Indian poet Kamala Das's poem “Summer in Calcutta” from feminist perspectives (especia... more A study of Indian poet Kamala Das's poem “Summer in Calcutta” from feminist perspectives (especially Helen Cixous's Écriture Féminine).

Research paper thumbnail of Colours of Blackness - Soyinka’s Telephonic Mimicry

A study of Wole Soyinka's poem "Telephone Conversation" from the perspective of Homi K Bhabha (po... more A study of Wole Soyinka's poem "Telephone Conversation" from the perspective of Homi K Bhabha (postcolonial mimicry and its subversive potential).

Research paper thumbnail of Professor Shonku and His World of Science - Satyajit Ray’s Brilliant Science Fiction (SF)

Research paper thumbnail of The Question of Violence and Vitality in the Poetry of Ted Hughes

Research paper thumbnail of A Search for the Lost Root--Bangladeshi Migration and Communal Disharmony, Diaspora Identity and Elements of Nostalgia in Taslima Nasreen's Pherā

Research paper thumbnail of Towards a Poetics of Reconstruction--Reading and Enacting Identity in Kynpham Sing Nongkynrih's Poetry

Research paper thumbnail of Plato Reflected in Tennyson’s Mirror

Research paper thumbnail of Multicoloured Glass: Studies on Indian Short Stories (Edited Book)

The Indian short story is not merely a derivative of the Western genre, but owes much to the grea... more The Indian short story is not merely a derivative of the Western genre, but owes much to the great story-telling tradition of Indian antiquity. The mythical and legendary tales as well as folktales have provided a fertile soil for the modern Indian short story to germinate. Beginning towards the end of the nineteenth century, the Indian short story flourished in the twentieth century. It became evident by the end of the past century that the canon is attuned to Indian landscape whose heterogeneous people and their diverse experiences it reflects so faithfully. The Indian short story as a distinct genre resembles a “multicoloured glass” scattering myriad hues which is analogous to the diversity of our country itself. The variegated and unbeaten genre righteously deserves critical attention which it has been deprived of.

With twenty-seven scholarly articles by academics, professors and researchers, the present critical volume is a tribute to an affluent but neglected genre of Indian literature. In accord with the genre itself, the scope of the book allows for such diversity as the classic writers like Tagore and Manto; the feminist writers like Ismat Chughtai, Kamala Das, Shashi Deshpande and Indira Goswami; the dalit writers like Bama and Ajay Navaria; the diaspora writers like Bharati Mukherjee and Jhumpa Lahiri. The reworking of myth by Mahasweta Devi, the nature lore of Ruskin Bond, the saga of exile by the Kashmiri Pandits, the satire of Hari Shankar Parsai, the macabre tales of Satyajit Ray, the problematics of identity in Manoj Das and memory in Temsula Ao—all are taken into consideration within the structure of a single volume to make this a stimulating overview for students and scholars of Indian literature.

Log In