Indian Fiction in English: Roots and Blossoms, Volume 2Amar Nath Prasad, Nagendra Kumar Singh Contributed articles. |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 63
Page 3
... natural . It is their unique identification to avoid superficial and artificial language and prefer natural . Without taking tea or brushing his teeth , like a pet animal in the circus he has to do the untouchable unclean work , to ...
... natural . It is their unique identification to avoid superficial and artificial language and prefer natural . Without taking tea or brushing his teeth , like a pet animal in the circus he has to do the untouchable unclean work , to ...
Page 13
... nature of flux and the illusion of what men call Lime , life and death.2 To Narayan , it is the survival of permanent values that grant India a grand outlook in the modern world . He adheres to social realism , while Raja Rao examines ...
... nature of flux and the illusion of what men call Lime , life and death.2 To Narayan , it is the survival of permanent values that grant India a grand outlook in the modern world . He adheres to social realism , while Raja Rao examines ...
Page 17
... nature of the novelist , William Walsh asserts that he had peculiar fascination for girls and whoever fell before his eyes he gave his heart to her . Interestingly , he had been in Coimbatore in July 1933 and saw a girl drawing water ...
... nature of the novelist , William Walsh asserts that he had peculiar fascination for girls and whoever fell before his eyes he gave his heart to her . Interestingly , he had been in Coimbatore in July 1933 and saw a girl drawing water ...
Page 19
... natural , un - exciting and beautifully adapted to communicate Indian sensibility.19 His style is so unobtrusive and devoid of purple patches that it is difficult to find quotable passages to illustrate his particular characteristics.20 ...
... natural , un - exciting and beautifully adapted to communicate Indian sensibility.19 His style is so unobtrusive and devoid of purple patches that it is difficult to find quotable passages to illustrate his particular characteristics.20 ...
Page 25
... nature to " make any demand on her or anyone " . A crack in the relations of the mother and Sita develops when the mother craves for Sita bearing a child , and forces her to take " various measures to cure barrenness " , like " chewing ...
... nature to " make any demand on her or anyone " . A crack in the relations of the mother and Sita develops when the mother craves for Sita bearing a child , and forces her to take " various measures to cure barrenness " , like " chewing ...
Common terms and phrases
accept alienation American Ammu Anand appears becomes begins body brother called caste characters child comes culture Dark daughter death Delhi desire Douglas dream English existence experience face fact father feels Fiction Gandhi girl give given goes hand heart Heat Henry human husband Ibid Indian ironic irony Jhabvala Kamala Markandaya kind land landscape later leaves living look Mahatma marriage married meaning mind moral mother Nagaraj Narayan nature Nawab never night novel novelist Olivia person picture political present Ranakpur REFERENCES relations relationship representative Rukmani seems seen sense Shadows shows silence Sita situation social society spirit story suffer Swami tells theme things thought traditional tries true understand untouchable values Velutha village wants wife Winton woman women writing young