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Looking at Modern India IN Mark Tullys NO FULL STOPS IN INDIA and NON- STOP INDIA
Author(s) -
Gogoi Sikhamoni
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
international journal of english and literature
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2141-2626
DOI - 10.5897/ijel2013.0547
Subject(s) - modernity , independence (probability theory) , indian art , ideology , criticism , colonialism , politics , social science , sociology , media studies , history , political science , law , art history , mathematics , statistics
Mark Tully’s books, No Full Stops in India (1992) and Non Stop India (2011) are telling commentaries on the situation of post-independent India. Central to both books is the question of Indian ‘modernity’ or ‘development’ after independence, and in this regard they explore various aspects of Indian society, economy, politics and religion. The aim of this paper is to analyse how India has been pictured in these stories. This picture should be important for two reasons – firstly, that these stories come from the pen of an author who is not an Indian but British by birth; and secondly, because the author claims that in these stories, ‘Indians do as much of the speaking as possible’. Moreover, Non Stop India, written twenty years after No Full Stops, allows one to contemplate on the issues raised in the first book. The methodology used in this paper is mainly analytical, and combines tools of postcolonial theory and ideological criticism. The paper is constrained in that it tries to evaluate only two books by one author – Mark Tully. However, the researcher believes that this paper should contribute to define India’s present reality in a new light, which can be further researched into. Key words: India, Mark Tully, colonial legacy, postcolonial, modernity.

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