Today

Today
Author: Acōkamittiran̲
Publisher: Indian Writing Publication
Total Pages: 100
Release: 2007
Genre: Fiction
ISBN:

Ashokamitran's Today - translated from his Tamil novel Indru is anavant garde departure from traditional forms of writing. The novelstrings together a number of genres such as narrative fiction, poetry,lectures and a newspaper interview to produce a rare amalgam of fictionand recent history.The condition of freedom fighters in free India, social evils like dowry,corruption and crass commercialism, institutions like marriage andpolitics are highlighted as problems that occupy centre stage today. Theperiod chosen for such delineation is immediately before and after theimposition of a national emergency by Prime Minister Indira Gandhi.Anger, persecution, lack of compassion and tolerance find theircounterpoint in a father figure perhaps a veiled reference to the Fatherof the Nation whose dreams lie shattered in the present.Today is also for all time. Its concerns are universal, its people are offlesh and blood. It raises serious questions about the validity of the valuesystems governing our lives increasingly complex world. It is withoutdoubt a trailblazer in post modern Tamil literature.

Encyclopedia of India

Encyclopedia of India
Author: Stanley A. Wolpert
Publisher:
Total Pages: 472
Release: 2006
Genre: History
ISBN:

A four-volume survey of the history, cultures, geography and religions of India from ancient times to the present day. Includes more than 600 entries, arranged alphabetically. For students and general readers.

Language and Society in South Asia

Language and Society in South Asia
Author: Michael C. Shapiro
Publisher: Motilal Banarsidass Publishe
Total Pages: 314
Release: 2008-09-30
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 9788120826076

During the past two decades there has been a significant amount of research and publication concerning the sociolinguistics of South Asian languages. Language and Society in South Asia is the first major attempt to assess the impact of this new literature. It exposits the methodological and theoretical assumptions of sociolinguistic descriptions of south Asian languages, and contrasts them with the assumptions of earlier characterizations of these languages. An important feature of this book is its detailed examination of numerous schools of linguistic analysis within which most past descriptive work on South Asian languages has been carried out. This is done in language accessible both to the professional linguist and to non-linguists interested in social aspects of language use in South Asia. Among the topics treated in this book are traditional taxonomies of South Asian languages, South Asia as a linguistic area, social dialectology, bi- and multilingualism in South Asia, pidginization, creolization, and South Asian English, ethnographic semantics, and the ethnography of speaking. The work also contains an extensive bibliography of the scholarly literature pertinent to the study of South Asian languages in their social contexts.