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Index
Cover
Frontmatter
Introduction: Indian Literature and the World
1. Comparing Multilingual Perspectives
Pre-Nation and Post-Colony: 1947 in Qurratulain Hyder’s My Temples, Too and Salman Rushdie’s Midnight’s Children
Reading Together: Hindi, Urdu, and English Village Novels
Choosing a Tongue, Choosing a Form: Kamala Das’s Bilingual Algorithms
2. Enlarging the World Literary Canon: New Voices and Translation
A Multiple Addressivity: Indian Subaltern Autobiographies and the Role of Translation
The Modern Tamil Novel: Changing Identities and Transformations
The Voices of Krishna Sobti in the Polyphonic Canon of Indian Literature
3. Globalized Indian Public Spheres
Resisting Slow Violence: Writing, Activism, and Environmentalism
The Novel and the North-East: Indigenous Narratives in Indian Literatures
From Nation to World: Bombay/Mumbai Fictions and the Urban Public Sphere
The Individual and the Collective in Contemporary India: Manju Kapur’s Home and Custody
‘Home is a Place You’ve Never Been to’: A Woman’s Place in the Indian Diasporic Novel
Backmatter
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