COML221 - Creating New Worlds: the Modern Indian Novel

Status
O
Activity
SEM
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
Creating New Worlds: the Modern Indian Novel
Term
2019A
Subject area
COML
Section number only
401
Section ID
COML221401
Course number integer
221
Registration notes
Course is available to Freshmen and Upperclassmen.
Meeting times
MW 02:00 PM-03:30 PM
Meeting location
MCNB 285
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Gregory Y. Goulding
Description
Lonely bureaucrats and love-struck students, Bollywood stars and wayward revolutionaries: this course introduces students to the worlds of the Indian novel. From the moment of its emergence in the 19th century, the novel in India grappled with issues of class and caste, colonialism and its aftermath, gender, and the family. Although the novel has a historical origin in early modern Europe, it developed as a unique form in colonial and post-colonial India, influenced by local literary and folk genres. How did the novel in India--and in its successor states after 1947--transform and shift in order to depict its world? How are novels shaped by the many languages in which they are written, including English? And how do we, as readers, engage with the Indian novel in its diversity? This course surveys works major and minor from the past 200 years of novel-writing in India--with surveys both into predecessors of the Indian novel and parallel forms such as the short story. Readings will include works in translation from languages such as Hindi, Bangla, Urdu, Telugu, and Malayalam, as well as works written originally in English. Students will leave this course with an understanding of the Indian novel, along with the social conditions underlaying it, especially those relating to caste and gender.
Course number only
221
Cross listings
SAST220401
Use local description
No