000 02300nam a22002657a 4500
005 20251014114630.0
008 251014b |||||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
020 _a9780143478645
037 _cPurchased
_nCurrent Books, Convent Junction, Market Road, Ernakulam
041 _aEnglish
082 _a891.4
_bNEW
100 _aNil
245 _aNEW WRITING IN INDIA
250 _a1
260 _aHaryana
_bVintage - Penguin Books
_c2025
300 _g299
500 _a Adil Jussawalla’s anthology of Indian writing was first published in 1974. Today, more than half a century later, it remains one of the landmarks of our literature, featuring writers from various Indian languages, including English, whose works have stood the test of time. The book traces a map of what Jussawalla calls ‘literary and linguistic cross-currents’, through the writings of Nirmal Verma (Hindi), Sunil Gangopadhyay (Bengali), Bhalchandra Nemade (Marathi), P. Lankesh (Kannada) and Ashokamitran (Tamil), among other literary greats. This anthology challenges the colonial notion of Indian literature as a collection of exotica as well as the terrible misconception that modern Indian writing is an inferior mimicry of Western forms. What we have here is a literary record that stands out for the originality of the voices it contains and yet underscores a set of shared themes and artistic concerns that galvanized these writers and brought them together. When this book was first published, the pieces collected here were barely a decade old and hence were presented under the rubric of ‘New Indian Writing’ of the time. But as Amit Chaudhuri reminds us in his introduction to the anniversary edition, the term ‘new’ in the title is not merely a reference to recency but to a ‘self-replenishing, revolutionary’ quality that never diminishes in great literature. Ezra Pound once said that literature is news that stays news. New Writing in India bears testament to those words and to the multifarious tradition of Indian writing.
650 _aLiterature & rhetoric 
650 _aOther literatures 
650 _aEast Indo-European and Celtic literatures 
650 _aModern Indic languages
700 _aAdil Jussawalla (ed.)
942 _cLEN
942 _2ddc
999 _c196610
_d196610