compatative language in india
TRANSCRIPT
8/10/2019 Compatative Language in India
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Indian Literature
Comparative Language
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Introduction: Vast land and great diversity
India is an influential nation in South Asia is home to the world’s second
largest population. It is a country of bulk variety, arguably the most sundry nation
in the world, whether it concerns religious, cultural, or ethnic diversity. The
climate and landscape throughout the Indian subcontinent ranges dramatically
from arid deserts to tropical rainforests. India's cultural diversity is in many ways a
reflection of its varied climate. Languages, food, clothing, customs, songs and
literature differ throughout India's many regions. The notable aspects of India’s
soft power cover as many different spheres as imaginably possible, from simple
agriculture, to ritual religious practice, to quality technological services. With a
rapidly growing consumer base, and a swiftly rising overall economic output
fueled by its young and increasingly educated population, India has begin its trip
on the path to becoming a dominant world power within the next century as
opposed to the dormant role it has played so far.
Colonialism and Post colonialism
India was ruled by either the British East India Company, or the
Royal Crown herself. The native people were subjected to the whims of
British colonialism, which involved a strict system of monopolization to
afford greater profits for the English. But around the turn of the century, the
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the British but as far as the struggle was concerned there was no going
back. This inspired a new kind of struggle. The intelligentsia, which
earlier believed in the benevolence of British rule now came forward to
expose its brutality. Political associations were formed and the Indian
National Congress played a vital role in directing the freedom struggle.
We discuss in this Unit the role of moderates and militant nationalists
and the efforts made during the Swadeshi Movement to involve the
masses into the freedom struggle.
II.
National Council of Education
The National Council for Education, in its previous status since
1973, was an advisory body for the Central and State Governments on
all matters pertaining to teacher education. Despite its commendable
work in the academic fields, it could not perform essential regulatory
functions, to ensure maintenance of standards in teacher education and
preventing proliferation of substandard teacher education institutions.
A. Rabindranath Tagore speech on world literature “visvasahitya”
This was also the body where Rabindranath Tagore made his
speech on world literature – or visvasahitya – that he called
Comparative Literature in 1907. Buddhadeva Bose, a renowned poet
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whose name is linked with the beginning of the modernist movement
in Bengali poetry in the thirties of the twentieth century, and who
was also a profuse translator of modern non-English European
poetry as well as of the classical Sanskrit author Kalidasa, was called
upon to take charge of the department. Bose invited Sudhindranath
Datta, another important modern poet and translator, to teach in the
department.
Datta had earlier written a path-breaking essay entitled
“KavyerMukti,” or the liberation of poetry, in which he advocated
interacting with poetic traditions from all over the world. What I
wish to underline is the fact that the foundational impulses of the
discipline in Bengal were creative , with a focus on the training of the
imagination, and were transnational , along with a trace of the
historical imperative to look beyond the colonial masters.
III.
Jadavpur University
It is important to go into the history of Comparative Literature in
India a little before talking about its present state. Comparative
Literature in India began in 1956 with the establishment of Jadavpur
University in Calcutta, a university that had as its parent body the
National Council of Education. We should mention here that my
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citation of events related to the department at Jadavpur University stems
from the fact that it was the single full-fledged department of
Comparative Literature in the country for a long period.
Conclusion
India is a country of immense linguistic diversity and, thus, a country of many
literatures. Based on history, ideology, and often on politics, scholars of literature argue
either for a unity of Indian literature or for a diversity and distinctness of the literatures of
India. Instead of this binary approach, my proposal involves a partic ular view of the
discipline of comparative literature, because I argue that in the case of India the study of
literature should involve the notion of the interliterary process and a dialectic al view of
literary interaction. Let me begin with a brief account of linguistic diversity
The unity in diversity and its perspectives are the bases of Comparative Literature
as a discipline in India. Such as Gurbhagat Singh who has been discussing the notion of
"differential multilogue" . He does not accept the idea of Indian literature as such but opts
for the designate ion of literatures produced in India. Further, he rejects the notion of
Indian literature because the notion as such includes and promotes a nationalist identity.
As a relativist, Singh accord s literatures not only linguistic but also cultural singularities.
With regard to the history of comparative literature as a discipline, he rejects both the
French and the American schools as well as the idea of Goethe's Weltliteratur
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Instead, he argues for a celebration of difference and has anti cipated Charles
Bernheimer's much discussed Comparative Literature in the Age of Multiculturali sm.
For Singh, comparative literature is thus an exercise in differential multilogue. His
insistence on the plurality of logo is particularly interesting because it takes us beyond the
notion of dialogue, a notion that comparative literature is still confined to. Singh's
proposal of differential multilogue as a program will perhaps enable us to understand
Indian diversity without sacrificing the individualities of the particulars. Singh's notion of
differential multilogue reflects a post structure a list trend in Indian discourse today, a
trend that manifests itself among others by a suspicion of the designation of Indian
literatures as one. One of the reasons for this suspicion is that the key to the notion is held
centrally, whether by an institution or a synod of experts leading to an accumulation of
power. If we agree that power is the most ubiquitous social evil then the more
decentralization the better. Decentralization minimizes the aggression from above as well
as impels grass roots movements from below.
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Works Cited
Ahmad, Aijaz. "'Indian Literature': Notes towards the Definition of a Category." In
Theory: Classes, Nations, Literatures. Aijaz Ahmad. London: Verso, 1992.
Bernheimer, Charles, ed. Comparative Literature in the Age of Multiculturali sm .
Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins UP, 1995.
Das, Sisir Kumar. A History of Indian Literature . Vol 1: 1800-1910: Western Impact /
Indian Response . New Delhi: Sahitya Akademi, 1991.
Durisin, Dionýz. Theory of Interliterary Process . Bratislava: VEDA/Slovak Academy of
Sciences, 1989.
Gálik, Marián. " Interliterariness as a Concept in C omparative Literature." CLCWeb:
Comparative Literature and Culture: A WWWeb Journal 2.4 (2000).