Kumar, Prabhat
Preview |
PDF, English
Download (12MB) | Terms of use |
Citation of documents: Please do not cite the URL that is displayed in your browser location input, instead use the DOI, URN or the persistent URL below, as we can guarantee their long-time accessibility.
Abstract
This work explores the history, politics and aesthetics of satire and its emergence as a distinct literary-artistic mode of social expression in north India. It examines modern Hindi literary and visual satire (cartoons) and their complex relationship with the questions of modernity and colonialism in the newly configured vernacular public sphere of the late nineteenth and early twentieth century colonial North India from a transcultural perspective.
Document type: | Dissertation |
---|---|
Supervisor: | Dharampal-Frick, Prof. Dr. Gita |
Date of thesis defense: | 23 July 2015 |
Date Deposited: | 01 Oct 2018 09:18 |
Date: | 2018 |
Faculties / Institutes: | Service facilities > South Asia Institute (SAI) Service facilities > Exzellenzcluster Asia and Europe in a Global Context |
DDC-classification: | 490 Other languages 741.5 Comics, Cartoons 760 Graphic arts Printmaking and prints 800 Literature and rhetoric 890 Literatures of other languages 990 General history of other areas |
Controlled Keywords: | Satire, Transcuturality, Modernity, Colonialism, Tradition, History, Language, Literature, India, Literary Culture, Visual Culture, Cartoon, Print Culture, Public Sphere, Hindi Vyangya Sahitya, Vyangya-Chitra, Bharatendu Harishchandra, Radhacharan Goswami, Pratap Narayan Mishra, Ramavatar Sharma, J P Shrivastava, Mahavir Prasad Dvivedi, Ramchandra Shukla, Banarasidas Chaturvedi, Shivpujan Sahay, Mohanlal Mahto 'Viyogi', Punch, Matvala, Chand, Pratap, Hindu Panch, Sudha, Madhuri, Ganga |