Embodying Utopia in 1935: Poetry and the Feminized Nation

This article aims to highlight the significance of the gendering of the emerging nation that literature in India’s nationalist period generated, nurtured and reinforced. This article focuses on what Judith Brown (1985) identified as the ‘decisive decade’ (1930–1940) of the nationalist movement, when...

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Main Author: Anne Castaing
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Open Library of Humanities 2019-01-01
Series:Open Library of Humanities
Online Access:https://olh.openlibhums.org/article/id/4545/
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spelling doaj-3ded82c893504a6a9d12578888eed5bb2021-08-18T11:14:11ZengOpen Library of HumanitiesOpen Library of Humanities2056-67002019-01-015110.16995/olh.385Embodying Utopia in 1935: Poetry and the Feminized NationAnne Castaing0 This article aims to highlight the significance of the gendering of the emerging nation that literature in India’s nationalist period generated, nurtured and reinforced. This article focuses on what Judith Brown (1985) identified as the ‘decisive decade’ (1930–1940) of the nationalist movement, when nationalist vision and imagery extensively penetrated people’s imagination. It will examine two contexts (Hindi and Bengali), which are certainly different but in some ways interestingly similar, through the works of two poets, both ‘independent’ of both literary movements and political parties. Besides having been published the same year, Harivansh Rai Bacchan’s Hindi collection Madhuśālā (1935) and Jibanananda Das’ Bengali poem Banalatā Sen (1935) are romantic works, somewhat distinctive to most literary production of this period, and both exploit in a rather similar way an evanescent female figure who continues to fertilize Hindi and Bengali imaginations. The purpose of this paper is to question the practice and the function of these romantic figures in nationalist imagination and to examine the issues of differences and similarities they raise regarding the vision of the utopian nation in both Hindi and Bengali contexts.https://olh.openlibhums.org/article/id/4545/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anne Castaing
spellingShingle Anne Castaing
Embodying Utopia in 1935: Poetry and the Feminized Nation
Open Library of Humanities
author_facet Anne Castaing
author_sort Anne Castaing
title Embodying Utopia in 1935: Poetry and the Feminized Nation
title_short Embodying Utopia in 1935: Poetry and the Feminized Nation
title_full Embodying Utopia in 1935: Poetry and the Feminized Nation
title_fullStr Embodying Utopia in 1935: Poetry and the Feminized Nation
title_full_unstemmed Embodying Utopia in 1935: Poetry and the Feminized Nation
title_sort embodying utopia in 1935: poetry and the feminized nation
publisher Open Library of Humanities
series Open Library of Humanities
issn 2056-6700
publishDate 2019-01-01
description This article aims to highlight the significance of the gendering of the emerging nation that literature in India’s nationalist period generated, nurtured and reinforced. This article focuses on what Judith Brown (1985) identified as the ‘decisive decade’ (1930–1940) of the nationalist movement, when nationalist vision and imagery extensively penetrated people’s imagination. It will examine two contexts (Hindi and Bengali), which are certainly different but in some ways interestingly similar, through the works of two poets, both ‘independent’ of both literary movements and political parties. Besides having been published the same year, Harivansh Rai Bacchan’s Hindi collection Madhuśālā (1935) and Jibanananda Das’ Bengali poem Banalatā Sen (1935) are romantic works, somewhat distinctive to most literary production of this period, and both exploit in a rather similar way an evanescent female figure who continues to fertilize Hindi and Bengali imaginations. The purpose of this paper is to question the practice and the function of these romantic figures in nationalist imagination and to examine the issues of differences and similarities they raise regarding the vision of the utopian nation in both Hindi and Bengali contexts.
url https://olh.openlibhums.org/article/id/4545/
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