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Sharma, Malavika – Journal on English Language Teaching, 2015
Indian women have always been viewed as the object of desire. In the advent of Technological Advancement women are still thought of as inferior to men. Though there is an increase in the literacy rate of the girl child, it does not imply the emancipation of the girl child. Women are bound by the social customs and traditions. In this sense women…
Descriptors: Indians, Females, Gender Differences, Gender Bias
McLane, John R., Ed. – 1975
The papers in this document were delivered by scholars from the United States and Canada at the ninth annual Conference on Bengal Studies in 1973. The first two papers discuss the accommodation of Indian literary forms and views of life in the Bengali novel, a foreign literary form adopted in India only in the last century and a half. The third…
Descriptors: Asian Studies, Bengali, Drama, Language Role

Wickramagamage, Carmen – World Englishes, 1990
Narayan, in his novels, has exhibited a preference for a stable social order both as a structural device and as a reverential representation of community life. The effect of this predilection on his portrayal of Indian women, who are beginning to enjoy greater autonomy and social mobility, is examined. (JL)
Descriptors: English, Females, Feminism, Foreign Countries

Dissanayake, Wimal – World Englishes: Journal of English as an International and Intranational Language, 1985
Investigates how some South Asian novelists who use English as their chosen instrument of communication are seeking to "decolonize" English. They are trying to capture the deep structures and lineaments of national cultures in order to make English a more authentic vehicle for expressing the consciousness of the people. (Author/SED)
Descriptors: Authors, Creative Writing, Cultural Awareness, English (Second Language)