Bhumika Agrawal Assistant Professor, Department of Humanities Priyadarshini Institute of Engineering and Technology, Nagpur (Maharashtra) Theatrical art is an established and a well-acclaimed part of Indian culture. It is such an art form in which collective discontent and misery can be expressed in a manner to have an immediate impact over a large audience. India…
Author: Vishwanath Bite
The Midnight’s Grandchildren: Articulating the Postmodern Spirit in English Fiction of India Analyzing Tabish Khair’s The Thing About Thugs
Varsha Singh Research Scholar Vinoba Bhave University, Hazaribag, Jharkhand & Himanshu Shekhar Choudhary Lecturer, Dept of English, P K Roy Memorial College, Dhanbad. Abstract The phrase Midnight’s Grandchildren stands for the generation tending to take forward the remarkable accomplishments made by the Post-Independence era of India towards new dimension. In 1980, “Midnight’s Children” was the…
time
Tendai R Mwanaka Chitungwiza, Zimbabwe Desire names this place possessive about panic like a shadow of time. Prone to heart’s murmurs shift shapes of desires wagging through this time. Storing this time like sunshine into our own skins. Our eyes pressed to the keyholes of our lives. Time runs down our spines like a shiver….
Bama’s Karruku and Sangathi: The True Reflections of Indian Dalit Women
Shakila Bhanu .Sk Asst. Professor of English, Vignan University In India a large section of people living a life of suppression and unendurable sorrow though it is largest democracy in the world. These section of people are termed as Dalits and the cause of their wretchedness is our strongly caste structured society. The word was…
Moment of Transition
Tejaswini Kale Maharashtra,India. Little crystals of sugar exploding like mini-bombs in the boiling kettle full of water. It’s havoc down there with explosions every minute white souls reducing to nothing, mixing in the colourless liquid. It’s evening, around five the sun about to bid goodbye leaving behind an orange glow sugary sweet like the tea…
Desires and Exiles in James Joyce’s Exiles
Tanmay Chatterjee Research Scholar Department of English Banaras Hindu University Varanasi – 221005, U.P., India. Abstract: Exiles (1918) is the only existing play by James Joyce. He wrote this play while finishing his first novel, A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man (1916), and beginning work on Ulysses (1922). Joyce was much influenced…
Frozen Wings
Dissenting Voice of Shirin Ebadi: Representation of Democracy in Iran Awakening: A Memoir of Revolution and Hope
Aysha Swapna. K. A Assistant Professor of English Farook College, Calicut, Kerala. Pin-673 632 “Democracy works when people claim it as their own” it is said. Dr. Shirin Ebadi, the 2003 recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize had risen quickly to become the first female judge in Iran. But when the religious authorities declared women…
Concept of the Divine in Kartik Sharma’s The Quest of the Sparrows
A.K. Chaturvedi Assistant Professor of English S.L.P. Govt. P.G. College Gwalior Having got the degrees of B. Tech and M.B.A. from IIT Delhi and IIM Ahmedabad respectively and having been deeply influenced by his father’s desire to communicate his spiritual reflections and observations to the seekers of the Divine, Kartik Sharma, like Chetan Bhagat, makes…
Mastery, Magnificence and Majesty in the Poetic Soliloquy Taj Mahal- The Monument of My Love- A Poetic Monologue
by Dr. T. Swamidoss Book Review by Dr. V. Sunitha Name and affiliation of the author Dr. V. Sunitha Asst Professor, English Sreenivasa Institute of Technology and Management Sciences Chittoor-517127 Dr. T. Swamidoss’ poetic monologue Taj Mahal is enriched with poetic and artistic prudence. The book is a sumptuous word feast to the aesthetes. Indisputably…