Indian Women Novelists: A Feminists Psychoanalytical StudyRawat Publications, 2007 - 192 pagina's "The present study employs a gynocritical strategy to examine the six novels by contemporary Indian women novelists, namely, Shashi Deshpande's The ""Dark Holds No Terrors"" (1980), Shobha De's ""Socialite Evenings"" (1989), Githa Hariharan's ""The Thousand Faces of Night"" (1992), Mrinal Pande's ""Daughter's Daughter"" (1993), Manju Kapur's ""Difficult Daughters"" (1998) and Arundhati Roy's ""The God of Small Things"" (1997). The aim is to focus on women's experiences as women in the contemporary Indian society which is in a transitional phase-holding on to the traditional views yet inclining towards the forces of modernity like globalisation, materialism, consumerism and feminism. Efforts are made to record the emerging female voices using the tenets of the new women-centred psychologists, which suit the Indian cultural context." |
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accepted Ammu Anjali attitude becomes bonding Books caring Center characters child concern conditioned connection create criticism cultural Dark daughter Daughter's Daughter Delhi depression desire Devi Difficult Daughters dominant emotional empathy English experience Faces of Night fails father feel female feminine Feminism Feminist Fiction Ganga gender Gilligan girls gives hand happiness Holds human husband ideal identity Indian individual Karuna Kasturi later leads leave lives look male Mammachi marriage married Mayamma mean Miller moral mother needs never novel Novelists nurturing parents patriarchal person points presented Press problems psychological rejects relation relationship responsibility role Saru Saru's says sense Shashi shows silence Sita Small Things social society story strong suffering Thousand Faces traditional turn understanding values Victim Virmati virtues voice wife woman women Writing York