Language Ideologies and the Vernacular in Colonial and Postcolonial South Asia

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Language Ideologies and the Vernacular in Colonial and Postcolonial South Asia

  • 言語:ENG
  • ISBN:9781032247342
  • eISBN:9781000930429

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Description

This volume critically engages with recent formulations and debates regarding the status of the regional languages of the Indian subcontinent vis-à-vis English. It explores how language ideologies of the “vernacular” are positioned in relation to the language ideologies of English in South Asia.

The book probes into how we might move beyond the English-vernacular binary in India, explores what happened to “bhasha literatures” during the colonial and post-colonial periods and how to position those literatures by the side of Indian English and international literature. It looks into the ways vernacular community and political rhetoric are intertwined with Anglophone (national or global) positionalities and their roles in political processes.

This book will be of interest to researchers, students and scholars of literary and cultural studies, Indian Writing in English, Indian literatures, South Asian languages and popular culture. It will also be extremely valuable for language scholars, sociolinguists, social historians, scholars of cultural studies and those who understand the theoretical issues that concern the notion of “vernacularity”.

Table of Contents

List of Figures

List of Contributors

Acknowledgements

Note on Transliteration

Introduction: Language Ideologies and the ‘Vernacular’: A Critical Perspective

Nishat Zaidi and Hans Harder

PART I

Ideologies of Vernaculars and English

1 Beyond Hegemonic Binaries: English and the ‘Vernaculars’ in Post-liberalization India

Javed Majeed

2 Urdu Language Ideologies and Pakistani Identity

Arian Hopf

3 “Mother English”: Savitribai Phule on Caste Patriarchy and the Ideology of the English Vernacular

Christian Lee Novetzke

4 The Location of Theory: Bhāṣa Literatures in Indian and North American Postcolonialism

Suddhaseel Sen

5 A Vernacular Archive of Sex and Sexuality: Personal Annotations

Charu Gupta

6 Political Reform, Territorialising Language: Re-casting Difference, Constitutional Categories and Developmental Goals, 1905–1950s

Veena Naregal

PART II

Lost/Found in Translation between Vernaculars and English

7 Linguistic Estrangement: When Is a Language My Own?

Sudipta Kaviraj

8 British Translators, Bhagat Singh, and ‘Atheism’: How ‘Reverse Translation’ Alters the Meaning of Philosophical Concepts

Ruth Vanita

9 Telling Lives in Forked Tongues: Reading Shanta Gokhale’s and Nabaneeta Dev Sen’s Autobiographical Writings

Dhrupadi Chattopadhyay

10 Vernacularizing Science in Colonial Bengal: A Translational Site of ‘Other’ Archives

Indrani Das Gupta

11 Multilingual Locals in Transnational Geographies: Vaijñan̄ ik Upanyas̄ and the Cosmopolitanisation of Hindi in Late Colonial North India

Ishita Singh

PART III

Language Ideology, Literature and the Vernacular Public Spheres

12 Vernacularizing Emotions: Mohammed Ali’s Comrade and Hamdard

Margrit Pernau

13 In Defence of the Prem|sāgar: Re-evaluating the Narrative of the Hindi–Urdu Split

Gautam Liu

14 Vernaculars across Texts: Modern Islam and Modern Literature in Bengal

Neilesh Bose

15 Reading Caste in Vernacular Journals

Meenakshi Yadav

16 A South Asian Vernacular Public Overseas: Tamil in the Straits Settlements, c. 1870–1942

Torsten Tschacher

Index

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