Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://localhost:8080/jspui/handle/123456789/5183
Title: Raja Rao and World Literature
Authors: Allen, Richard
Keywords: Literature
Raja Rao
Indian Literature
Issue Date: Dec-2012
Publisher: Indian Institute of Advanced Study, Shimla
Abstract: Raja Rao is rightly recognised as one of the three founders of the Indian novel written in English. His later writing, however, moves beyond India and takes a quite different direction from that of R K Narayan or Mulk Anand, to the point where it seems right to ask whether it has become in some sense world literature. To bring this question into a manageable form I will ask it in relation to The Serpent and the Rope (Rao, 1960) and The Cat and Shakespeare? (Rao, 1965), with some reference in the last section also to The Chessmaster and his Moves (Rao, 1988). Defining the term world literature is itself not a simple task, and I will therefore focus my argument through two contrasting definitions drawn from David Damroschís stimulating book, What is World Literature (Damrosch, 2003).
Description: Page no. - 50 to 56
URI: http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/5183
ISSN: 0972-1452
Appears in Collections:Summerhill, Vol.18, No.2, (2012)

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