Sociology Through Literature: A Study of Kaaroor's Stories

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This book presents a comprehensive study of nearly 100 of Kaaroor’s short stories. Kaaroor Neelakanta Pillai is one among the Big Six of the ‘new wave’ in Malayalam literature which began in the mid-1940s. The Big Six and their immediate followers wrote about the common man, peasants, pavement-dwellers, fishermen, rickshaw-pullers, underpaid school teachers ― their lives, aspirations and vulnerabilities. By treating Kaaroor’s stories as case studies, the book takes a sociological approach to understanding the representation of a wide array of themes: romantic overtones, erotic pursuits, marital episodes, issues of family, lives of children, behavioural patterns, shades of greed, the idea of spirituality and politics in Malayalam literature.

With its annotated transcreation and detailed commentary, this book brings Kaaroor’s works to the general reader, and will be useful to scholars and researchers of South Asian literature, English literature, linguistics, cultural studies, besides those interested in Malayalam literature and the Malayali/Indian diaspora across the world.

Author(s): S. Devadas Pillai
Edition: 1
Publisher: Routledge India
Year: 2019

Language: English
Pages: 242
Tags: Malayalam, Kerala, Malayalam Stories, Sociology and Literature, Literary Theory and Criticism

Cover
Half Title
Title
Copyright
Dedication
Contents
Foreword
Preface
1 Introductory notes on the ‘Big Six’
2 Romantic overtones
Appendix: arranged marriages: a note
3 Erotic pursuits
4 Marital episodes
5 On small children and teenagers
6 Families: sinking, troubled
7 ‘Sir’ stories
8 Sirs: the other side
9 Dictates of fate
10 Behavioural patterns
11 Some social issues
12 Political themes
13 Shades of greed
14 Profiles of the poor
15 Some uncommon people
16 Social dropouts
17 Spiritual themes
18 Some more episodes
19 Tuskers and mahouts
Appendix: elephants and temples
20 Kaaroor’s ‘Zoo’
21 Sociology through literature: some endnotes
References
Index