Family Fictions and World Making

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A01=Sreya Chatterjee
Anglo-Irish Gentry
Anticolonial Nationalism
Author_Sreya Chatterjee
Big House
Brother Liam
Category=DS
Category=DSBH
Category=DSBH5
Celtic Tiger
Celtic Tiger Period
Celtic Tiger Years
Cho Oyu
comparative literature studies
decolonial feminist criticism
Disengage
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eq_biography-true-stories
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eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
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Family
Family Fiction
Family fictions
Fatal Germ Cell
Feminist criticism
gender and kinship theory
Globalization
Globalization era
India
India Shining
India's North East
Indian family novel
India’s North East
intersection of family and nation in fiction
Ireland
Irish Postcolonial
Mahasweta Devi
modern Irish Indian novels
Mother Son Relationship
Nation Building
Naxalite Movement
Northern Irish Troubles
Novel
postcolonial literary analysis
transnational narratives
Underclass Worker
Violated
White Tiger
Women's writing
Working Class Catholic Community
World Making
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367437947
  • Weight: 700g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Apr 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Family Fictions and World Making: Irish and Indian Women’s Writing in the Contemporary Era is the first book-length comparative study of family novels from Ireland and India. On the one hand, despite an early as well as late colonial experience, Ireland is often viewed exclusively within a metropolitan British and Europe-centered frame. India, on the other hand, once seen as a model of decolonization for the non-Western world, has witnessed a crisis of democracy in recent years. This book charts the idea of "world making" through the fraught itineraries of the Irish and the Indian family novel. The novels discussed in the book foreground kinship based on ideological rather than biological ties and recast the family as a nucleus of interests across national borders. The book considers the work of critically acclaimed women authors Anne Enright, Elizabeth Bowen, Mahasweta Devi, Jennifer Johnston, Kiran Desai and Molly Keane. These writers are explored as representative voices for the interwar years, the late-modern period, and the globalization era. They not only push back against the male nationalist idiom of the family but also successfully interrogate family fiction as a supposedly private genre. The broad timeframe of Family Fictions and World Making from the interwar period to the globalization era initiates a dialogue between the early and the current debates around core and periphery in postcolonial literature.

Sreya Chatterjee is Assistant Professor of English at the University of Houston. She specializes in global Anglophone, postcolonial literatures, and women’s writing with emphasis on core-periphery relationships in women’s fiction from Ireland and India. She has published on diverse topics such as Dalit autobiography in Comparative Literature Studies (2016), and representations of Naxalism in literature in Setu (2017). Most recently, her essay on the Irish playwright Brian Friel appeared in History, Imperialism, Critique: New Essays in World Literature (Routledge, 2018).

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