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Ecofeminism and the Indian novel / Sangita Patil.

By: Patil, Sangita [author.]Material type: TextTextLanguage: English Original language: English Series: Routledge explorations in environmental studiesPublication details: London : Routledge, 2020Description: x, 150 p. ; 25 cmISBN: 9780367198336 :Subject(s): Ecofeminism in Indian literature | Indic fiction (English) -- History and criticism | Feminist literary criticismDDC classification: 823.914
Contents:
Introduction: Ecofeminism and the Indian Novel Introduction Ecofeminism: Environmental Studies and Feminism Ecofeminism: Indian Polemical Discourse Indian Novel 1 An Interface between Human Beings and Nature 1.1 Introduction 1.2 The Genealogy of Ecofeminism 1.3 Indian Polemical Discourse: Environment and Ecofeminism 1.4 The Genealogy of Indian Novel 1.5 The Discursive Formation of the Environment in Indian Novel 1.6 Rumination on Indian Environment Movements and Protest 1.7 Conclusion: The Formulation of Framework 2 Agriculture as an Ecofeminist Concern: Nectar in a Sieve, The Upheaval, Return to Earth and Gift in Green 2.1 Introduction 2.2 Nectar in a Sieve: The Impact of Tannery on Pastoral Life 2.3 The Upheaval: The Impact of Mining on Farming Community 2.4 Shivram Karanth's Return to Earth: The Impact of Modernization on Agrarian Culture 2.5 Sarah Joseph's Gift in Green: A Toxic Discourse 3 Dam Construction and Ecological Crisis: The Coffer Dams and Dweepa 3.1 Introduction 3.2 The Project of Dam Construction and Ecological Crisis in India 3.3 Kamala Markandaya's The Coffer Dams: Modern Juggernaut 3.4 Na D' Souza's Dweepa: An Island of Destruction 4 The Industrial Disaster: Animal's People 4.1 Introduction 4.2 The Bhopal Gas Tragedy: A Backdrop 4.3 Patriarchal Developmental Attitude: Industrial Disaster 4.4 Women as Victim of the Industrial Disaster 4.5 Rhetorical Tropes 4.6 The Uniqueness of Animal's People as an Ecohumanist Narrative 5 Animals as Absent Referents: The Man from Chinnamasta 5.1 Introduction 5.2 The Mythological Background 5.3 The Ethnography of Animal Sacrifice 5.4 Patriarchy and Animal Sacrifice 5.5 Women's Concern for Animals 5.6 The Uniqueness of The Man from Chinnamasta as an Ecofeminist Narrative 6 Reconceptualizing Ecofeminism: From Ecofeminism to Ecohumanism 6.1 Introduction 6.2 An Overview of the Ecofeminist Concern 6.3 Reconceptualizing Ecofeminism: From Feminism to Humanism 6.4 Conceptual Framework
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Textual Documents Institute of Development Studies Kolkata
823.914 P298e (Browse shelf (Opens below)) Available 8664

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Introduction: Ecofeminism and the Indian Novel Introduction Ecofeminism: Environmental Studies and Feminism Ecofeminism: Indian Polemical Discourse Indian Novel 1 An Interface between Human Beings and Nature 1.1 Introduction 1.2 The Genealogy of Ecofeminism 1.3 Indian Polemical Discourse: Environment and Ecofeminism 1.4 The Genealogy of Indian Novel 1.5 The Discursive Formation of the Environment in Indian Novel 1.6 Rumination on Indian Environment Movements and Protest 1.7 Conclusion: The Formulation of Framework 2 Agriculture as an Ecofeminist Concern: Nectar in a Sieve, The Upheaval, Return to Earth and Gift in Green 2.1 Introduction 2.2 Nectar in a Sieve: The Impact of Tannery on Pastoral Life 2.3 The Upheaval: The Impact of Mining on Farming Community 2.4 Shivram Karanth's Return to Earth: The Impact of Modernization on Agrarian Culture 2.5 Sarah Joseph's Gift in Green: A Toxic Discourse 3 Dam Construction and Ecological Crisis: The Coffer Dams and Dweepa 3.1 Introduction 3.2 The Project of Dam Construction and Ecological Crisis in India 3.3 Kamala Markandaya's The Coffer Dams: Modern Juggernaut 3.4 Na D' Souza's Dweepa: An Island of Destruction 4 The Industrial Disaster: Animal's People 4.1 Introduction 4.2 The Bhopal Gas Tragedy: A Backdrop 4.3 Patriarchal Developmental Attitude: Industrial Disaster 4.4 Women as Victim of the Industrial Disaster 4.5 Rhetorical Tropes 4.6 The Uniqueness of Animal's People as an Ecohumanist Narrative 5 Animals as Absent Referents: The Man from Chinnamasta 5.1 Introduction 5.2 The Mythological Background 5.3 The Ethnography of Animal Sacrifice 5.4 Patriarchy and Animal Sacrifice 5.5 Women's Concern for Animals 5.6 The Uniqueness of The Man from Chinnamasta as an Ecofeminist Narrative 6 Reconceptualizing Ecofeminism: From Ecofeminism to Ecohumanism 6.1 Introduction 6.2 An Overview of the Ecofeminist Concern 6.3 Reconceptualizing Ecofeminism: From Feminism to Humanism 6.4 Conceptual Framework

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