Poetry, Politics and Culture

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A01=Akshaya Kumar
amrita
Amrita Pritam
arun
Arun Kolatkar
Author_Akshaya Kumar
bhakti
Bhakti Poetry
Category=D
Category=DS
Category=DSC
Category=GTM
dalit
dalit literature analysis
Dalit Poetry
Dalit Poets
Dalit Women
diaspora poetry research
Diaspora Poets
english
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
feminist literary criticism
Ghadar Movement
Granth
Granth Sahib
hindi
Hindi Dalit
Hindi Poetry
Imtiaz Dharker
indian
Indian English Poetry
Indian English Poets
Indian poetry political activism
Indian Woman Poets
Jeet Thayil
Khari Boli
kolatkar
Namdeo Dhasal
Nationalist Period
poets
postcolonial literary studies
pritam
Punjabi Dalit
Punjabi Poet
Punjabi Poetry
subaltern theory
Suniti Namjoshi
vernacular modernism
Vice Versa

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138384200
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 129 x 198mm
  • Publication Date: 14 Aug 2018
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This book maps the journey of the Indian poetic imagination—in Hindi, Panjabi and Indian English—from its original quasi-spiritual longings to its activist interventions in the public domain. As Indian poetry of the post-1990s gravitates towards a non-Orientalised postcolonial nationalism, it seeks to rewrite and disseminate the shifting coordinates of nationalist imagination in terms of the dissent of the subaltern discontents of the nation.

The book is interdisciplinary: it studies Indian poetry from the new emerging imperatives of postcolonialism, new historiography (subaltern, dalit and diasporas), nationalism, and cultural studies. Covering the two major north Indian languages—Hindi and Punjabi—along with poetry in Indian English, the book is a close textual study of about 150 poetry collections in these languages. It is path-breaking in its study of secular poetry written in the so-called vernaculars, with critical attention to its participation in the political as well as cultural processes of nation-making.

This cutting-edge book should be of interest to scholars of Indian writings in English, Hindi and Panjabi, gender studies, dalit and diaspora studies, postcolonial poetry and to students reading South Asian literature and culture.

Akshaya Kumar is Reader at Punjab University (Chandigarh) since 1998. He has published a number of research papers on Indian poetry and has authored A.K. Ramanujan: In Profile and Fragment.

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