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Writing the first person : literature, history, and autobiography in modern Kerala / Udaya Kumar

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: India Permanent Black 2016Description: 324 pISBN:
  • 9788178245201
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 894.8120 KUM-U
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Shelving location Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Books Books BITS Pilani Hyderabad 800 General Stack (For lending) 894.8120 KUM-U (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 36745
Total holds: 0
Browsing BITS Pilani Hyderabad shelves, Shelving location: General Stack (For lending), Collection: 800 Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
894.811371 AMB Fish in a dwindling lake / 894.811371 CHU-R Seeing in the dark / 894.81171 BAM-A Sangati : events / 894.8120 KUM-U Writing the first person : 894.8120 SRE-C Retelling the Ramayana : voices from Kerala / 894.81209 NAI-A Where the rain is born: writings about Kerala / 894.812271 KIN-K My tears, my dreams /

Why did autobiographical writings emerge in Kerala more than a century ago? What were the social, material, and cultural features that motivated individuals to write personal histories and memoirs? This book shows the complex ways in which private recollections, and the use of memory for loosely literary ends, also entailed the production of history by another name. Udaya Kumar analyses this period of social transformation to show the emergence of new resources for the self-relective writer, as well as of new idioms of expression. Among the many genres and forms he studies are anti-caste writings, works advocating spiritual and social reorientation, monologic poetry, and early novels in Malayalam. Sree Narayana Guru’s thought, the portrayal of women and desire in Kumaran Asan’s poetry, and the fictional worlds created by major novelists of this period (such as O. Chandu Menon and C.V. Raman Pillai), says Udaya Kumar, excited fresh appraisals of morality, personal emotions, and shared pasts. The envisioning of caste reform, the recording of historical change, and the creation of political identities, he shows, are often inextricable aspects of new literary practices. Using Kerala’s cultural history as his entry point, Udaya Kumar has written an uncommonly inspirational book of ideas about the relationship of literature to history, on literature as—in a sense—‘history in person’.

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