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ANIMAL (3) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   100662


Fiction of living beings: man and animal in the work of Mo Yan / Zhang, Yinde   Journal Article
Zhang, Yinde Journal Article
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Publication 2010.
Key Words Humanism  Fiction  Man  Mo Yan  Animal 
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2
ID:   181337


From Worse than Dogs to Heroic Tigers: Situating the Animal in Dalit Autobiographies / Mukhopadhyay, Aniruddha   Journal Article
Mukhopadhyay, Aniruddha Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Dalit autobiographies narrate the journey of protagonists from the ‘untouchable’ communities of India towards self-realisation and their struggle for human rights. A vigilant reading recognises the representation of animals as tropes in Dalit autobiographies that trace the reconstitution of the non-human limit of the Dalit as narrative subject. This paper reads Dalit autobiographies by Narendra Jadhav, Bama and Namdeo Nimgade to reveal the importance of animals as an analogy in Dalit literature, but then, following the work of Spivak and Derrida, it deconstructs the circulation of the hegemonic logic of the rational humanist subject in the radical gesture of Dalit subject constitution.
Key Words Caste  Autobiography  Rights  Dalit  Subject  Animal 
Trope  Non-Human  Limit 
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3
ID:   169992


My World Is a Different World: Caste and Dalit Eco-Literary Traditions / Sharma, Mukul   Journal Article
Sharma, Mukul Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract India ‘nature writing’ has traditionally encompassed ecology, geography and sacrality, and has often missed Dalit literary traditions. In the last few decades, environment literature has expanded its horizons to consider intersections between ecology, society and culture. However, the question still remains: why is there no recognition of ecological underpinnings in the writings of subordinate castes by the wider canon of the environmental literary sphere? This article addresses this exclusion and explores the relationship between caste, nature, Dalits and environmental imagination. It takes Dalit autobiographies from different regions and languages to highlight an unexplored aspect of Dalit writings, thus widening the scope and perspective of environment literature and providing a distinct perspective from the margins. Through the lens of eco-literature, eco-criticism and eco-justice, the article underlines how nature’s beauty and caste burden, space and identity, land and bondage, social injustice and environmental ‘othering’ are significant features of these life narratives. It weaves certain select themes like nature’s beauty, caste exploitation, labour and animals to explore the pain and stigmatisation, along with a vibrancy and dynamism, in Dalit eco-narrations of the self.
Key Words Ecology  Labour  Autobiography  Animal  Caste Exploitation  Eco-Justice 
Nature Writing 
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