Shashi Deshpande《黑暗无所畏惧》中的神话、传统与印度信仰

Prajesh Jena
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引用次数: 0

摘要

Shashi Deshpande是当今印度最著名的小说家之一。在印度,女性写作的历史比男性写作的历史要短,但我们看到,越来越多的女性作家的小说得到了国际认可。她们赢得了大量的国家和国际奖项和资助,现在看来,随着女性写作赶上男性写作,她们很快就会崭露头角。虽然许多其他女性作家,如Kamla Markandaya, Nayantara Sehgal, Ruth Prawar Jhabvala, Anita Desai, Santha Rama Rao, Attia Hussain, Padmini Sen Gupta, Nargis Dala, Mrinalini Sarabhai, Gita Mehta, Arundhati Roy, Kiran Desai,丰富了印度英语文学,Deshpande占据了一个特殊的位置,她是当今为数不多的将文学典籍,神话和神话融入她的作品的作家之一,毫不费事地将其与早期的成果融合在一起。Deshpande在许多小说中使用印度神话、传说和人物作为事件、事件、偶然事件和人物的隐喻。在她的许多书中,她融入了西方民间故事。莎希·德什潘德的作品,尤其是她的小说《黑暗无所畏惧》(1980),为印度女性的内心世界描绘了一幅惊人生动的画面。太长时间以来,它一直被要求保持沉默。德什潘德在小说中对神话和民间传说的运用体现了印度文学想象力的非殖民化。这些手段对作者来说很方便,因为她的许多小说中都有女性主人公,因此可以照亮女性的内心世界。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Myth, Tradition and Indian Beliefs in Shashi Deshpande's "The Dark Holds No Terrors"
Shashi Deshpande is one of India's most well-known novelists today. Women's writing in India has a shorter history than male writing, but we are seeing a rise in the number of women authors whose fiction is being recognized internationally. They have won a slew of national and international awards and grants, and it now appears that women's writing will rise to prominence shortly as they catch up to their male counterparts. While many other women authors, such as Kamla Markandaya, Nayantara Sehgal, Ruth Prawar Jhabvala, Anita Desai, Santha Rama Rao, Attia Hussain, Padmini Sen Gupta, Nargis Dala, Mrinalini Sarabhai, Gita Mehta, Arundhati Roy, Kiran Desai, enrich Indian English Literature, Deshpande occupies a special place She is one of the few authors working today who incorporates literary allusions, myth, and mythology into her work, effortlessly blending it with earlier results.   Deshpande has used Indian myths, legends, and people in many novels as metaphors for events, incidents, happenings, and characters. In many of her books, she incorporates Western folktales. Shashi Deshpande's writings, especially her novel "The Dark Holds No Terrors" (1980), paint a startlingly vivid picture of Indian womanhood's inner world. For too long, it has been made to stay quiet. Deshpande's use of myth and folklore in her novels exemplifies the decolonization of the Indian literary imagination. These devices are handy to the author for illuminating the inner world of women's minds since many of her novels contain female protagonists. 
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