Monday 23 November 2020

Sunday Reading:Postcolonialism

 "Postcolonialism Today"


 





Hello Readers


On Sunday 22th November we had online session on Postcolonialism organized by iSPELL (Indian Society for the Promotion of English language and literature).The chief speaker of this event was Prof.Bill Ashcroft.The chairperson of this event was Dr.Jyoti Patil,president of iSPELL.And the master of the ceremony was Miss. Parvathy Ramchadran,Assistant Prof.English Kerala.So freinds today i would like to summarize this session in my blog as a sunday reading task given by Prof. Dr.Dilip Barad sir.



↪️About Chief Speaker:

 

The chief speaker ok today's session was Prof.Bill Ashcroft.Bill Ashcroft is an Emeritus Professor in the School of English, Media and Performing Arts. A founding exponent of post-colonial theory, co-author of The Empire Writes Back, the first text to examine systematically the field of post-colonial studies. He is author and co-author of twenty one books, variously translated into five languages, Including Post-Colonial Transformation (Routledge 2001), Post-Colonial Futures (Continuum 2001); Caliban's Voice (Routledge 2008) Intimate Horizons (ATF 2009) and Utopianism in Postcolonial Literatures (Routledge 2016). He is the author of over 200 chapters and papers, and he is on the editorial boards of ten international journals.

Click here to know more about his publications, awards and his area of expertise.


💠What is Postcolonialism?


Postcolonialism is the critical academic study of the cultural legacy of colonialism and imperialism, focusing on the human consequences of the control and exploitation of colonized people and their lands. More specifically, it is a critical-theory analysis of the history, culture, literature, and discourse of (usually European) imperial power.


Postcolonialism encompasses a wide variety of approaches, and theoreticians may not always agree on a common set of definitions. On a simple level, through anthropological study, it may seek to build a better understanding of colonial life—based on the assumption that the colonial rulers are unreliable narrators—from the point of view of the colonized people. On a deeper level, postcolonialism examines the social and political power relationships that sustain colonialism and neocolonialism, including the social, political and cultural narratives surrounding the colonizer and the colonized. This approach may overlap with studies of contemporary history, and may also draw examples from anthropology, historiography, political science, philosophy, sociology, and human geography. Sub-disciplines of postcolonial studies examine the effects of colonial rule on the practice of feminism, anarchism, literature, and Christian thought.


At times, the term postcolonial studies may be preferred to postcolonialism, as the ambiguous term colonialism could refer either to a system of government, or to an ideology or world view underlying that system. However, postcolonialism (i.e., postcolonial studies) generally represents an ideological response to colonialist thought, rather than simply describing a system that comes after colonialism, as the prefix post- may suggest. As such, postcolonialism may be thought of as a reaction to or departure from colonialism in the same way postmodernism is a reaction to modernism; the term postcolonialism itself is modeled on postmodernism, with which it shares certain concepts and methods.


💠Prof.Bill Ashcroft's views on Postcolonialism:


It had very interesting journey since 1989 when The right back was published.It is constantly changing and developing.


💠What  is Postcolonial Theory?



◾️It is the branch of contemporary theory that investigates and develops preposition about the cultural and political impact of European conquest upon colonized societies and the nature of those society's responses.So there is two aspects of it.It is the analysis of impact of European colonization.


◾️Post colonial is above all a way of reading.So it's reading practice that draws attention to the profound and continuing effects of colonization upon literary production on anthropological accounts, historical records and scientific and administrative writing.


Watch the video to know more about the postcoloniali .





💠Postcolonialism and Globalization:


Language of postcolonialism drove the cultural turn in globalization in 1990s.Prof.Bill Ashcroft put the information about SIMON GIKANDI and they have gave two important things in common:


1.They are concern with explaining forms of social and cultural organization whose ambition is to transcend the boundaries of the nation state.


2.They seek to provide new ways to understand cultural flows that can longer be explained by a homogeneous Eurocentric narrative of development and social change.

💠'On Post colonial Future' by Bill Ashcroft




On Post-Colonial Futures proposes a radical view of the influence that colonized societies have on their former colonizers. In this ground-breaking book, Bill Ashcroft extends the arguments he posed in The Empire Writes Back to investigate the transformative effects of post-colonial resistance and the continuing relevance of colonial struggle. The book demonstrates the remarkable capacity for change in the intellectual spheres of literature, history and philosophy. The transformations of post-colonial literary study have not been limited to a simply rewriting of the canon but have affected the ways in which all literature can be read and have led to a more profound understanding of the network of cultural practices that influence creative writing.


⏹️A plethora of idea about the future of postcolonial studies arose at the th beginning of the century.


⏹️Growing Themes:


  • Transnational Literature

  • Transnationalis

  • Multiple Modernities

  • World literature

  • Cosmopolitanism

  • The Post colonial scared

  • Postcolonial Ecocriticism



💠Postcolonial Utopianism:


Postcolonial Utopianism is very interesting phenomenon.Utopian studies society was formed in 1988 The Empire Writer Backs formed in 1989,but you know the two have had nothing really to do with each other.Very recently Prof.Bill Ashcroft has published Postcolonial Utopianism and Postcolonial Literature.


(Bill Ashcroft on postcolonial Utopias)


(Postcolonial literature by Bill Ashcroft)

Thomas More's 'Utopia':



Utopia is a work of fiction and socio-political satire by Thomas More (1478–1535), written in Latin and published in 1516. The book is a frame narrative primarily depicting a fictional island society and its religious, social, and political customs. Many aspects of More's description of Utopia are reminiscent of life in monasteries.


💠Literature's Anticipatory Function:



◾️Literature is so important so valuable in the anticipation of the future.


◾️Heimat-the home we have all sensed but never experienced or know."It is Heimat as utopia that determines the truth content of work of art."


◾️For Bloch Heimat always lies beyond the border.

He was also discussed about Broeders and Horizons of literature.



💠Transnation:



🔷Another concept that was discussed by Prof.Bill Ashcroft was about Trans naction.


🔷The transaction now all these only subjects all these citizens moving around the boarders of the state .The nation has always tried to identify a certain identify for itself.Prof.Ashcroft says that now in young nations  such as Australia this becomes almost an obsession as it grows.People are obssessed with the idea of Australian national identity . Probably in India too the idea of national  identity is something that people can escape really whether they are drawn to it or not.But this picture shows the actual multiplicity of a nation of the different strand that go to make it could put in another way that a nation is a big tossed salad.

 


Here is the full video recording of this event.The video was recorded by Prof.Dr.Dilip Barad sir.Please watch the video to knows more about this event.


💠Conclusion:



To conclude we can say that the term postcolonial has a different perspective.This term is also very huge one.No one can describe this term in briefly.



Words:1185

Monday 16 November 2020

Sunday Reading:Ecocritcism

 Ecocritical Thinking:Sitanshu Yashachandra's 'Tree Once Again'



Welcome Readers

               On 10th November we had online session on Ecocritical thinking by Devang Nanavati sir on Sitanshu Yashachandra's poem 'Tree Once Again'.Our professor Dr.Dilip Barad sir gave us task as a sunday reading of this online session.So this blog is a response to the Barad sir on Ecocriticism.



What is Ecocriticism?






Ecocriticism is an intentionally broad approach that is known by a number of other designations, including "green (cultural) studies", "ecopoetics", and "environmental literary criticism", and is often informed by other fields such as ecology, sustainable design, biopolitics, environmental history, environmentalism, and social ecology, among others.


Thus, if we wish to understand our contemporary attitude toward the environment, its literary history is an excellent place to start. While authors such as Thoreau and Wordsworth may first come to mind in this context, literary responses to environmental concerns are as old as the issues themselves. Deforestation, air pollution, endangered species, wetland loss, animal rights, and rampant consumerism have all been appearing as controversial issues in Western literature for hundreds, and in some cases, thousands of years.

Sitanshu Yashachandra's'Tree Once Again'


In the below images this poem is in both form  in English as well as in Gujarati.













This poem is about satire on human beings.In this poem Sitanshu Yashachandra make powerful satire on using tree as our need.In this poem poet describe his own thought of one trunk and also said that the dinning table, chairs, writing table, books, all are made with wood of tree and we have not idea how many trunks were used in this process of making furniture. and what we should do with them? we easily changed them and replaces with new one. we can not though the processing of these and for making these all comfort human has cut down so many trees




Examples:

          On the beginning of this talk Devang sir gave an example of Mahasweta's story 'The Arjun'.


Mahasweta Devi’s “Arjun” relays the story of Ketu Shabar, a good-for-nothing drunkard who turns the saviour for his tribe. The story is an impassioned rendering that highlights the insensitivity of modern man towards forests and tribals. It portrays, successfully, the role that a tree plays in the life of the tribesmen.


Click here to know more about this story.

 

 

Here are 5 most powerful environmental movements in India's history


Mahatma Gandhi once aptly said, “Earth provides enough to satisfy every man's needs, but not every man's greed.”


However, for many centuries, human beings have been exploiting the Earth’s many natural resources. With the depleting resources and natural energy, and the ill-effects of carbon emissions, we are now facing the detrimental effects of our actions.


In India, in the past and the present, social activists have fought to preserve and restore Mother Nature. Through environmental and social movements, citizens have time and again reminded the world of the importance of preserving our Pale Blue Dot, and raised their voices to highlight environmental concerns.


Here are some of the environmental movements that have left a mark on our rich Indian history:



1)Chipko Movement:




Chipko movement, also called Chipko andolan, nonviolent social and ecological movement by rural villagers, particularly women, in India in the 1970s, aimed at protecting trees and forests slated for government-backed logging. The movement originated in the Himalayan region of Uttar Pradesh (later Uttarakhand) in 1973 and quickly spread throughout the Indian Himalayas. The Hindi word chipko means “to hug” or “to cling to” and reflects the demonstrators’ primary tactic of embracing the trees to impede the loggers.


2)The Bishnoi Movement:




In the 1700s, in Khejarli, in the Marwar region of Rajasthan, trees were ordered to be cleared for a new palace to be built.


Actor Swara Bhasker on helping 3,500 migrant workers reach home amidst lockdown

One of the villagers, Amrita Devi, could not bear to witness such an exploitation of the floral habitation. To stop the deforestation, she hugged the trees, while also encouraging others to do the same. More than 360 Bishnoi villagers were martyred in this movement.


The Bishnoi faith, that was established in 1485 AD by Guru Maharaj Jambaji, prohibited them from harming trees and animals. The Maharaja, upon learning about these events, rushed to the village and apologised to the community, and ordered the soldiers to cease their operations. He then declared the Bishnoi state a protected area.


3)Save Silent Valley Movement


Silent Valley is a tropical area in Kerala which is rich in biodiversity. In 1978, however, the lush evergreen cover was to be deforested for the construction of a hydroelectric dam across the Kunthipuzha river by the Kerala State Electricity Board (KSEB)


The locals feared that the project would submerge at least 8.3 square kilometres of the green cover around the dam area. Several NGOs opposed the project, and urged the government to abandon it. Kerala Sastra Sahitya Parishad (KSSP), an NGO, and the poet-activist Sughathakumari played an important role in the Silent Valley protests


In January 1981, the government relentlessly gave in to the demands of the population and called off the project. They declared the Silent Valley as a protected area.


4)Jungle Bachao Andolan:



In 1982, in the Singhbhum district of Bihar, the state government had decided to replace the natural Sal forests with the highly-priced teakwood trees. The tribals of Singhbhum protested this decision.


The movement was called by many environmentalists as ‘Greed Game Political Populism’. It later spread into the states of Jharkhand and Odisha.


5)Narmada Bachao Andolan (NBA):




Led by Medha Patkar with the support of Arundhati Roy, Baba Amte, and Aamir Khan, along with the adivasis, farmers, environmentalists, and human rights activists, the Narmada Bachao Andolan took place in the year 1985.


The main aim of the movement was to protest the building of several large dams across the Narmada river. It was kicked off when the people displaced by the construction of the Sardar Sarovar Dam were not provided proper rehabilitation and resettlement.


Although unsuccessful in their endeavour, they turned the focus into the preservation of the environment and the ecosystems of the valley. The NBA questioned the model of unchecked development across the world.


Conclusion:

To conclude we can say that we all human being must take care about the nature.Because on the earth we not only human beings are living but there are many others like trees ,insects and many others are also living here.





 

 



 



     Here is the full video recording by Dr.Dilip Barad sir on the online session.Please watch this video for more information about this poem and Ecocritical thinking.



Words:1195

Tuesday 3 November 2020

Thinking Activity: Renaissance Literature

Renaissance Literature

Thinking activity






After completing the unit of Renaissance literature our prof.Dr Dilip Barad Sir  gave us task as our thinking activity.This blog is response for that.


1.Write in brief about Edmund Spencer or Ben Jonson or Francis Bacon or on any one of their works.

   Edmund Spenser (1552-1599)                                                      



Life


Edmund Spenser was born in East Smith Field near the Tower of London and he was very poor.His education began at the Merchant Tailors' School in London and was continued in Cambridge.




Chaucer was his beloved master.After living Cambridge 1576 Spenser went to the North England,on some work or quest. Here is chief occupation was to fall in love & to record his melancholy over the lost Rosalind in the "Shepherd's Calendar".


Upon his friend Harvey's advise he came to London, bringing his poems.And here he met Leicester's and he also met Sidney and all Queens favorites.


In Kilcolman surrounded by great natural beauty , Spenser finisehed first three books of "The Faerie Queen."


In 1589 Raleigh visited him ,heard the poem with enthusiasm,hurried the poet of London and presented him to Elizabeth.


The first three books met with success and we're acclaimed as the greatest work in the English language.A yearly pention of 50 pounds was conferred by Elizabeth but rarely paid and the poet turn back to exile to Ireland again.


Soon after his written Spenser fail in  love with a beautiful Elizabeth,an Irish girl,wrote his "Amoretti"or sonnets in her honour.


In 1594 he married Elizabeth,celebrating his wedding with his "Epithalamion" one of the most beautiful wedding hymns in any language.


Spenser's next visit ti London was in 1595 when he published "Astrophel",an elegy on the death of his friend "Sidney" and three more books of "The Faerie Queen".


It is supposed that some unfinished parts of the "Faerie Queen"were burned in the castle.From this shock of this frightful experience Spenser never recovered.He returned to England heart broken and in the following year 1599 he died in an inn at West Minister.


Spenser's Major Work:




The Faerie Queen


Spenser's masterpiece is the epic poem The Faerie Queene. The first three books of The Faerie Queene were published in 1590, and a second set of three books were published in 1596. Spenser originally indicated that he intended the poem to consist of twelve books, so the version of the poem we have today is incomplete. Despite this, it remains one of the longest poems in the English language. It is an allegorical work, and can be read (as Spenser presumably intended) on several levels of allegory, including as praise of Queen Elizabeth 



Argument of "The Faerie Queen"


The hero visits the queen's court in fairy while she is holding a 12 days festival.On each day some distressed person appears unexpectedly tells a woeful story of distressed beauty or virtue and asks for a champion to right the wrong and to let the oppressed go free.Again the duty is assigned by the queen and adventures of these knights are the subjects of the book.


Here I am sharing the link Click here to get more information about this poetry.


The Shepherd's Calendar


                                            

The Shepheardes Calender is Edmund Spenser's first major work, which was published in  1579.The Shepheardes Calendar is a series of allegorical poems written by Edmund Spenser in 1579. There is one poem for each month, and each is narrated by a shepherd who ruminates on life and the issues of the day. Each poem is written in a different poetic style, and thus early critics considered the work more for its form than its themes and content, believing the work to be an experimentation in verse. 



Amoretti

This is a Sonnet cycle written in 16th century.T he cycle describes his courtship and eventual marriage to Elizabeth Boyle.It was a part of volume entitled Amoretti and Epithalamion.The volume included the sequence of 89 sonnets.

Poetical Form



For the faerie queen Spenser invented a new verse form which has been called since his day the Spenserian Stanza.Spenser's stanza is in nine lines,riming ababbcbcc.




Minor Poems:


  • The Briar and the Oak

         .  (An allegory)

  • Mother Hubbard's Tale

. (Satire on society)

  • Astrophel

.            (Elegy on death of Sidney)

  • Epithalamion

.  (Marriage hymn)


Characteristics of Spenser's poetry


  1. A perfect melody

  2. A rare sense of beauty

  3. Splendid imagination

  4. A lofty moral purity and seriousness

  5. A delicate idealism




 Conclusion


Thus ,beacuse of all this things Edmund Spenser is known as "The Poet's Poet".This name was given gy Charles Lamb.



Ben Johnson

(1573-1637)


"Personally Johnson is the most commanding literary figure among the Elizabethan.For 25 years he was the literary Dictator of London,the chief of all the wits that gathered nightly at the old Devil Tavern.With his great learning ,his ability and his commanding position as poet Laureate,he set himself squarely against his contemporaries and the romantic tendency of the age."

                                         

                                             -W.J.Long


If Shakespeare voliolated the rules ,Johnson strictly followed them.He was a classic in this sense.He brought "humorous comedy".


Life

    

Johnson was born at West Minister about the year 1573.His father was an educated gentleman ,had his property confiscated and was himself thrown into prison by Queen Mary.






To know more about his life and work please click here to watch video.


Work of Johnson:


Johnson's work is in strong contrast with Shakespeare.He fought against romantic tendency and restore the classic standard.Thus the whole action of his drama usually covers only few hours or a single day.He never takes liberties with historical facts as Shakespeare does.His dramas are logically constructed.


Tragedy and comedy are kept apart from a few of Johnson's scenes we can understand batter than from all the plays of Shakespeare.


His Comedies:


A Tale of A Tub:(1596)


The last of his plays to staged during his lifetime.A Tale of a Tub was first performed in 1633 and published in 1640 in the second folio of Johnson's work.


The Isle of Dogs(1597):



He wrote this play along with Thomas Nash.The paly was performed probably by Pembroke's Man,at tha Sawang Theater in bankside in July or August 1597.It was immediately suppressed and no copy of it is known to exist.


Every Man In His Humour(1598):


The play was performed by the Lord Chamberlain's Men in 1598 at the Curtain Theater.Captain Bobadill one of the most important characters of Johnson's plays appear in this play.


Other Comedies:


  • Volpone or The Fox

  • The Alchemist

  • The Silent Woman

  • The Bartholomov Fair

  • Every Man Out of His Humour



Other Works:

  • Sejanus-1603

  • Catiline-1611

  • The Satyr

  • The Penalties

  • Masque of Blackness 

  • Masque of Beauty

  • Hue & Cry After Cupid 

  • The Masque of Queens




2.Can we differentiate general characteristics of Renaissance literature with that of Reformation / Restoration or Neo-classical or Romantic or Victorian or Modern literature?


The answer is that Yes, we can differentiate the general characteristics of Renaissance literature with that of Reformation / Restoration or Neo-classical or Romantic or Victorian or Modern literature. 


I would like to compare general characteristics of Renaissance literature with that of Romantic literature.




General Characteristics

Renaissance Literature

Romantic Literature

Definition of the age 

A cultural movement that began in Italy,the rebirth of learning caused by the discovery of Greek and Latin manuscript.

UAn artistic movement that valued imagination and feeling over intellect and reason.

Time period of the Age

14th century to 17th century

late- 18th century to mid- 19th century

Known as

The Golden Age

Romantic Revival

Genre

Drama

Poetry

Metaphor for the age

The first creative period of English literature:The sun rise after long night(dark age)

The second creative period of English literature.

Major characteristics

Religious tolerance,

Social contentment,

Political peace.

Imagination & creation,

The beauty of nature,

Rise of modern magazine.

Subject of the writing

Humanism,

Patriotism,

Human nature.

Supernatural elements,

Nature and common man,

Reason and science to imagination.

Major Writers 

Edmund Spenser

Thomas Sackville

Philip Sidney

George Chapman

Christopher Marlowe

William Shakespeare

Ben Johnson

Francis Bacon

Richard Hooker

Philip Sidney

Walter Raleigh

William Wordsworth

Samuel Coleridge

Robert Southey

Lord Byron

John Keats

Charles Lamb

P.B.Shelley

Jane Austen





Thus,we can say that both ages were the most significance ages in the histroy of English literature.



References

William J.Long History Book

Wikipedia-Edumand Spenser

Wikipedia--Ezabethan Age


Words-1386


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