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Ruth Jhabvala's India : Image of India in the Fiction of Ruth Prawer Jhabvala

Pankaj Bhan, B R Pub, 2005, ix, 300 p, ISBN : 8176464937, $42.00 (Includes free airmail shipping)

Contents: Preface. 1. Burgeoning of two literary traditions: Anglo-Indian and Indian-English. 2. 'Inside-outsider' or 'Outside-insider'? Placing Ruth Jhabvala in a literary tradition. 3. A detached portrait of India: Ruth Jhabvala's early fiction. 4. 'The twain shall never meet': Ruth Jhabvala's middle fiction. 5. Apotheosis of a negative vision: heat and dust. 6. India as metaphor: Ruth Jhabvala's 'American' fiction. 7. Summing up. Select bibliography. Index.

"Ruth Jhabvala's tryst with India and how it works itself out in her fiction has been a matter of critical concern for long. But barring occasional heretical voices, the established critical canon has always treated her as 'an adopted daughter of India' and her work as part of the Indian-English corpus of writing. Lately, working from the 'orientalist' perspective, critics have started exploring her work as a literary embodiment of post-colonial consciousness. They have also begun discovering post-modernist themes and issues hidden underneath her deceptively simple narrative concerns. This shift of perspective has aroused new interest in Ruth Jhabvala's fiction.

The present work is the first full-length study of Ruth Jhabvala's image of India as embodied in her entire body of fiction. It analyses Ruth Jhabvala's oeuvre from her first novel To Whom She Will to the last one to date Shards of Memory and traces her image of India as embodied in these novels. The image, as it turns out, has been quite objective and sympathetic in the first flush of Ruth Jhabvala's romantic tryst with India. But with each succeeding novel, it gets more and more negativity reaches its crescendo in heat and dust, Ruth Jhabvala's tour de force in many respects. In her recent phase of fiction writing emanating from New York, where she is presently settled, India has ceased to be a palpably visible protagonist but continues to impinge on her consciousness as a brooding metaphor.

Though essentially a work of literary criticism, Ruth Jhabvala's India should be of interest to students of sociology, indology, politics, in fact to all those interested in exploring Indian and what it stands for." (jacket)

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