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Johnston, J. (1992). Translation as Simulacrum. In L. Venuti (Ed.), Rethinking Translation: Discourse, Subjectivity, Ideology (pp. 42–56). Routledge.
This book sets out to defend the secular, plural and liberal imperative against sectarian (mostly Hindutva) arguments based in history and specious reasoning. Not actually a novel but, rather a collection of Indian short stories all set around the city of Mumbai, the tales in No Presents Pleasetake the ordinary, mundane lives of normal people — young couples, lonely bachelors, struggling workers, winners and losers, invisible people — and shine a quiet spotlight on them.
‘The Great Indian Novel’ by Shashi Tharoor, published by Penguin: £5.99, Abe Books
Haven’t most of us been obsessed with flying witches, magic schools, dazzling vampires (yes, I’m looking at you, #TeamEdward) and fantastical adventures at some point in our lives? As teens, we loved the world that young adult (YA) literature exposed us to – one filled with stories of the supernatural, of romance and of adventure – just as we were about to step into a new adult world. YA literature has since been our constant friend, our companion whenever we felt alone when fictional characters understood us more than our parents would. Perhaps that is why we feel such an affinity for the genre, and it shows in the ripples it has created in the world. Codell, J. F. (2006). Excursive Discursive in Gandhi’s Autobiography: Undressing and Redressing the Transnational Self. In D. Amigoni (Ed.), Life Writing and Victorian Culture (pp. 123–144). Aldershot.
Bondurant, J. (1958). Conquest of Violence: The Gandhian Philosophy of Conflict. University of California Press. On the road, as in many other aspects of Indian life, Might is Right.” William Dalrymple, The Last Mughal: The Fall of a Dynasty: Delhi, 1857 5. The Argumentative Indian: Writings on Indian History, Culture, and Identity by Amartya Sen The Argumentative Indian: Writings on Indian History, Culture, and Identitydispels many misconceptions about India Your skin had the warmth of the sun, it was blinding how beautiful you were, gods thought he wouldn’t fall for anyone and now they pitied him
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Everytime he got a glimpse, he would try to find something new in you even if it was subconsciously