Litinfinite Journal | ISSN: 2582-0400 [Online]

LITINFINITE JOURNAL
ISSN: 2582-0400 [Online]
CODEN: LITIBR

Peer-reviewed Journal of Literature and Social Sciences  

Open Access Journal

Litinfinite Journal is indexed by MLA Directory Of Periodicals & MLA International Bibliography, DOAJ, EBSCO, ProQuest, SCILIT, Ulrichsweb & Ulrich’s Periodicals Directory, ICI World Of Journals, J-Gate, JISC, ERIH PLUS & other major indexing services 

The Flowering Orchard by Vincent van Gogh (1888)

Litinfinite Journal 

Vol-5, Issue-2 | December, 2023

Literature and Cultural Studies

Content

Litinfinite Journal | Vol-5, Issue-2 | December, 2023

Content

Litinfinite Journal | Vol-1, Issue-2 | December, 2019

 

Article Title

Authors

Pagination

 

Content

 

 

 

Editorial

Sreetanwi Chakraborty

i-iii

1

Eco-consciousness in North-East Indian Indigenous Folktales

Sanarul Hoque

 

Dr. Punyashree Panda

1-10

2

Brueghel, Van Gogh, and Chirico: Inter-Animation of Painting and Writing in Some Ekphrastic Poems

Sadia Binte Kausar

11-21

3

Tunde Kelani’s Women: A Look at Patriarchy in Selected Nollywood Films through a Womanist’s Len

Lillian Shoroye

22-32

4

The Marginalized Mudbloods and The Squibs of Hogwarts: A Study of ‘Disability’ Through A Medium of J.K. Rowling’s Harry Potter Series

Debangana Basu

 

Dr. Paromita Mukherjee

33-40

5

The Stage (Rangomancho)

An English translation of Rabindranath Tagore’s article Rangomancho

 

Dr Manish Prasad

 

Dr Prasant Chakraborty

41-45

6

Precarity of Self: Identifying the Liminal Borders of Self in Shahnaz Bashir’s The Half Mother

 

L. Swathi

 

Dr. B. Padmanabhan

46-54

7

Reflection, Memory, and the Fine Art of Poetry: Reading Memories of Words by Jaydeep Sarangi

Sreetanwi Chakraborty

55-58

8

Reviewing Sohini Sen’s A Drop of Golden Sun: Re-presenting Tagore’s Gitanjali

Dr. Lalitha Sarma

59-62

Editorial
Sreetanwi Chakraborty
Chief-Editor- Litinfinite Journal
Assistant Professor
Amity Institute of English Studies and Research
Amity University Kolkata

Editorial
Sreetanwi Chakraborty
Chief Editor- Litinfinite Journal
Assistant Professor
Amity Institute of English Studies and Research
Amity University Kolkata

The span of literature and cultural studies is multifaceted and multilayered. There are various parts of an existing tradition, culture, socio-linguistic patterns, and reverberations of ethnicity and race that are represented in literature. In civil society, there are various strands of functionality that are to be taken into account. With each change in the cultural paradigm, the range of literature can also get diversified. Litinfinite Volume V, Issue II addresses these major instances of literary and cultural studies and how they can be incorporated as part of framing new postcolonial narratives. The first paper of this issue is titled Eco-consciousness in North-East Indian Indigenous Folktales written by Sanarul Hoque and Dr. Punyashree Panda, and this paper deals with the constant need for environmental preservation and restoration depending on the aesthetic and ecological balance in our surroundings. Traditional folktales, mythology, and stories that have been orally disseminated have the environment and ecological factors serving a significant socio-cultural role in the lives of the people. The writers have explored the effective utilization of land and territory as part of the self-growth process in the narratives of the Northeast. Anthropocentrism as a major component in cultural growth and development occupies a major role in the write-up.

Sadia Binte Kausar, lecturer in English from Dhaka, Bangladesh dwells at large on Brueghel, Van Gogh and Chirico: Inter-Animation of Painting and Writing in some Ekphrastic Poems. Her paper is a keen understanding of the nuanced patterns of Ekphrastic poems, and how as forms of art, they create mobilization among the readers. On the one hand, there is an idea of what art can create, and on the other hand, how art’s metamorphosis into the finer realms of poetry can be interpreted. Even the most mundane images of human life signify something more fruitful when turned into Ekphrastic poems. When it comes to an in-depth understanding of literature and cultural studies, films usually convey a message in all its fluidity. Lillian Shoroye from Ibadan University, Nigeria takes an insight into Tunde Kelani’s Women: A Look at Patriarchy in Selected Nollywood Films through a Womanist’s Lens and she discusses the Nigerian director Tunde Kelani’s major works Thunderbolt and The Narrow Path and the role of women in Kelani’s films. Motion pictures, patriarchy, and the role of existential cultural practices- everything plays a major role in allowing the growth of a human being. She also narrates the intensity in elucidating the concept of talking back, resistance and the idea of female emancipation. Most of the films of Kelani are adapted from texts that highlight major social issues.

The next paper is titled The Marginalized Mudbloods and The Squibs of Hogwarts: A Study of ‘Disability’ Through A Medium of J.K. Rowling’s Harry Potter Series by Debangana Basu and Dr. Paromita Mukherjee. In it, the authors discuss the concepts of racism, stigma, marginalization, and disability studies that can be interpreted in terms of the Harry Potter series. Recognition of the disability groups and understanding of the concept of group identity and existence form a major study in their narrative. After this we have a paper titled Precarity of Self: Identifying the Liminal Borders of Self in Shahnaz Bashir’s The Half Mother by L. Swathi and Dr. B. Padmanabhan. The paper takes into consideration a study of the precarity of people’s lives in Kashmir. It is about border, location, and their idea of an individual existence that is a crucial deciding factor in allocating them a position in the global map.  In this issue, we also have a translation and two book reviews. Dr. Manish Prasad and Dr. Prasant Chakraborty translate Rabindranath Tagore’s Rangomancho from Bengali and highlight the major critical features that can be found in Tagore’s idea of the stage. The central point of interest is how the Jatra as a theatrical form becomes popular among the audience and what socio-cultural function the jatra serves.

The first book review is Sohini Sen’s A Drop of Golden Sun: Re-presenting Tagore’s Gitanjali by Dr. Lalitha Sarma where she discusses Tagore’s original Bengali poems and the transcreation that Sohini Sen has poetically exemplified. Recontextualizing Sen’s version of Gitanjali does not become an arduous task and there is no artificiality involved in the process of transcreation. The necessity for decolonization and a decolonial reading of the Bengali texts is a new way of truly re-reading the seminal text of Tagore. In this volume, I have also reviewed the poetic peregrination of Dr. Jaydeep Sarangi’s book Memories of Words which is a fine tapestry of memory, space, self-actualization, and identity. The book is divided into three different segments and the poet uses stark images and symbols to highlight childhood days, cultural, and artistic patterns across various spaces and locales that have contributed to his mind’s growth.

So, here we present Litinfinite – Volume V, Issue II for our readers.

I express my heartfelt thanks to all our esteemed editors, reviewers, and contributors.

I offer my sincerest thanks to Penprints Publication, for their constant technical support.

Eco-consciousness in North-East Indian Indigenous Folktales

DOI: https://doi.org/10.47365/litinfinite.5.2.2023.1-10

Sanarul Hoque

Dr. Punyashree Panda

Litinfinite Journal | Vol-5, Issue-2 | December, 2023 | Page: 1-10

Litinfinite Journal | Vol-5, Issue-2 | December, 2023 | Page: 1-10

Eco-consciousness in North-East Indian Indigenous Folktales


Sanarul Hoque
Research Scholar, IIT Bhubaneswar.
Mail Id: [email protected] |Orcid- 0000-0003-2704-2895

Dr. Punyashree Panda
Associate Professor, SHSS&M, IIT Bhubaneswar.
Mail Id: [email protected] | Orcid- 0000-0002-7027-9137

Abstract

Environmental degradation is a severe threat to the existence of humanity as environment is the source of life for humanity, and the source itself is deteriorating every day due to insensate anthropocentric activities. To save environment from degradation, we need deep eco-consciousness, which recognizes nature as inherently valuable and emphasizes that humans must change their relationship with the ecology from materialistic usefulness to aesthetic and reverence. This study explores how North-East Indigenous discourse in the form of oral tradition, i.e., folktales, mythology, story, and epic, gives an account of Deep Ecology leading to eco-consciousness. It also seeks to answer how the Indigenous community’s eco-spirituality is generally formed through cultural, social, and oral traditions that help create a sense of eco-friendly attitude towards the environment. The objective of this study is to critically analyze the Indigenous folktales from North-East Indian cultural contexts to find out the inherent implication of those tales. The intention is to ascertain whether North-East Indian Indigenous oral traditions formulate a collective consciousness regarding preserving and protecting the environment.

Keywords: Indigeneity, Eco-spirituality, Eco-consciousness, Orality

Hoque, Sanarul, and Punyashree Panda. “Eco-consciousness in North-East Indian Indigenous Folktales.” Litinfinite Journal, vol. 5, no. 2, Dec. 2023, pp. 1–10. https://doi.org/10.47365/litinfinite.5.2.2023.1-10.

Litinfinite Journal | Vol-5, Issue-2 | December, 2023 | Page: 11-21

Brueghel, Van Gogh, and Chirico: Inter-Animation of Painting and Writing in Some Ekphrastic Poems

Sadia Binte Kausar
Lecturer in English, National Institute of Textile Engineering & Research (NITER)
Dhaka, Bangladesh
Mail id: [email protected] | Orcid- 0009-0003-4802-9259

Abstract

This article examines a critical reading of some selected ekphrastic poems to underscore the ways an ekphrastic poem re-presents or subverts the meaning of the original work of art and offers new ways of consumption. Ekphrasis, in its purest form, is the vivid verbal or literary description or reconstruction of a visual piece of art, real or imaginary. An ekphrastic poem is an amalgam of the poet’s intellectual and emotional responses to the art and oftentimes varies in meanings and expressions from the work it took inspiration from, that is, an ekphrastic poem may add to, and sometimes even deconstruct or subvert the meanings of the art. An ekphrastic poem not only appears as an independent form of art but also mobilizes the readers. This article unfolds in two ways. It offers a comparative reading of some select ekphrastic poems that are premised on the same work of art. It investigates three sets of poems that re-imagine Pieter Breughel’s Landscape with the Fall of Icarus and Vincent van Gogh’s The Starry Night. This article also addresses some poems based on Giorgio de Chirico’s Conversation among the Ruins and demonstrates how Sylvia Plath’s eponymous poem subverts the male gaze accentuated in Chirico’s painting. This article contends that ekphrastic poems are not mere descriptions of the paintings, rather they stand alone as independent forms of art as a result of being outcomes of the poets’ creative and emotional responses.

Keywords: Ekphrasis, ekphrastic poems, art, painting

Kausar, Sadia Binte. “Brueghel, Van Gogh, and Chirico: Inter-Animation of Painting and Writing in Some Ekphrastic Poems.” Litinfinite Journal, vol. 5, no. 2, Dec. 2023, pp. 11-21. https://doi.org/10.47365/litinfinite.5.2.2023.11-21.

Litinfinite Journal | Vol-5, Issue-2 | December, 2023 | Page: 22-32

Tunde Kelani’s Women: A Look at Patriarchy in Selected Nollywood Films through a Womanist’s Len

Lillian Shoroye
PhD, Department of Mass Communication, Dominion University, Ibadan.
Mail Id: [email protected] | Orcid – 0009-0001-5897-1905

Abstract

Although filmmakers in the Nigerian film industry, Nollywood, have consistently depict the family setting as a reference point for x-raying the struggles and trials of individuals or a group of people within the larger society, researchers in the field have rarely concerned themselves with highlighting this connection. While conflicts in marital relationships continues to receive attention as a significant thematic preoccupation in Nollywood, analyses of these films are usually focused at identifying issues vis-à-vis the negative representations and objectification of women. This is often to the exclusion of how the films serve as commentaries and reflections on social relations in the large society. Against the foregoing background, this study examines the role of patriarchy in the ordeal of two protagonists in the oeuvre of Nigerian filmmaker, Tunde Kelani, namely, Ngozi in Thunderbolt (2001), and Awero in The Narrow Path (2007). It adopts the conceptual frameworks of auteur theory and Womanism in the analyses of the film texts. Analyses reveal that the films are commentaries on gender relationships in African societies where women are victims of cultural inequities dictated by patriarchy. In addition, in line with womanist ideology, they emphasize the significance of cooperation between both sexes for the peaceful coexistence and development of any community. 

Keywords: Patriarchy, auteur theory, Womanism, Tunde Kelani, Nollywood

Shoroye, Lillian. “Tunde Kelani’s Women: A Look at Patriarchy in Selected Nollywood Films through a Womanist’s Len.” Litinfinite Journal, vol. 5, no. 2, Dec. 2023, pp. 22-32. https://doi.org/10.47365/litinfinite.5.2.2023.22-32

Litinfinite Journal | Vol-5, Issue-2 | December, 2023 | Page: 33-40

The Marginalized Mudbloods and The Squibs of Hogwarts: A Study of ‘Disability’ Through A Medium of J.K. Rowling’s Harry Potter Series

Debangana Basu
Ph.D. Scholar, Amity Institute of English Studies and Research, Amity University Kolkata, West Bengal. India.
Mail i.d.- [email protected]| Orcid- 0000-0002-1470-2025

Dr. Paromita Mukherjee
Associate Professor, Deputy Director and Head of the Institution, Amity Institute of English Studies and Research, Amity University Kolkata, West Bengal. India.
Mail i.d. – [email protected] | Orcid – 0000-0002-5058-3326

Abstract

It was not until the 20th century that disability studies were initialized in the West with some of the seminal works of scholars like Michel Foucault and Erving Goffman. The disability studies essentially gave a voice to those people who were denied social justice, and it was not only considered as a medical problem anymore; rather it was a major social issue. Apart from some of the major classics, if one can take a look inside the pop culture texts, then J.K. Rowling’s Harry Potter series would present before us an array of such issues concerning marginalized disabled people. In this paper, we would like to show the unfortunate treatment of such ‘disabled’ people in the magical world of Hogwarts, keeping in parallel view the sorrowful situation of our real world as well, based on the theoretical grounds laid down by Foucault and Goffman. Also, we intend to shed some light on the identity formation of the disabled group, which is directly linked with gender, race, and class. It is also our intention to reflect on the fact that disability is something which is not to be “fixed” but rather embraced and normalized, to achieve an egalitarian society.

Keywords: Disability Studies, Racism, Stigma, Marginalization, Disability

Basu, Debangana, and Mukherjee, Paromita. “The Marginalized Mudbloods and The Squibs of Hogwarts: A Study of ‘Disability’ Through A Medium of J.K. Rowling’s Harry Potter Series.” Litinfinite Journal, vol. 5, no. 2, Dec. 2023, pp. 33-40. https://doi.org/10.47365/litinfinite.5.2.2023.133-40.

The Stage (Rangomancho)
An English translation of Rabindranath Tagore’s article Rangomancho

DOI: https://doi.org/10.47365/litinfinite.5.2.2023.41-45

Dr Manish Prasad

Dr Prasant Chakraborty

Litinfinite Journal | Vol-5, Issue-2 | December, 2023 | Page: 41-45

Litinfinite Journal | Vol-5, Issue-2 | December, 2023 | Page: 41-45

The Stage (Rangomancho)
An English translation of Rabindranath Tagore’s article Rangomancho

Dr Manish Prasad
Assistant Professor
Amity Institute of English Studies and Research, Amity University Kolkata.
West Bengal, India.
Mail Id: [email protected] | Orcid- 0009-0006-4034-6091

Dr Prasant Chakraborty
Retired Associate Professor, BBM College, Agartala, Tripura.
Mail Id: [email protected]

Abstract

The present English translation of Rabindranath Tagore’s article Rangomancho originally written in Bengali provides special attention to the importance of dialogues in framing the identity of the actors on stage. Further, the translation here talks about different methodologies of stage performances with particular reference to the role of an audience in making the performance successful. In the end, the translation provides a picturesque presentation of the role of Jatra in making the theatrical performance cost-effective and audience-centric simultaneously. 

Keywords: Performance, Stage, Jatra, Actor, Verse

Manish Prasad, Manish, and Chakraborty, Prasant. “The Stage (Rangomancho): An English translation of Rabindranath Tagore’s article Rangomancho.” Litinfinite Journal, vol. 5, no. 2, Dec. 2023, pp. 41-45. https://doi.org/10.47365/litinfinite.5.2.2023.141-45.

Precarity of Self: Identifying the Liminal Borders of Self in Shahnaz Bashir’s The Half Mother

DOI: https://doi.org/10.47365/litinfinite.5.2.2023.46-54

L. Swathi

Dr. B. Padmanabhan

Litinfinite Journal | Vol-5, Issue-2 | December, 2023 | Page: 46-54

Litinfinite Journal | Vol-5, Issue-2 | December, 2023 | Page: 46-54

Precarity of Self: Identifying the Liminal Borders of Self in Shahnaz Bashir’s The Half Mother

L. Swathi
Doctoral Scholar (NFOBC – JRF), Department of English and Foreign Languages
Bharathiar University, Coimbatore.
Mail Id: [email protected] | Orcid- 0000-0002-1250-0198

Dr. B. Padmanabhan
Assistant Professor, Department of English and Foreign Languages
Bharathiar University, Coimbatore.
Mail Id: [email protected] | Orcid- 0000-0001-7395-126X

Abstract

This research paper explores the liminal state of existence and self-identity of ordinary people in the militarised state of Kashmir. In doing so, it aims to conceptually examine the precarity of self and the sequential element, vulnerability in Shahnaz Bashir’s novel, The Half Mother. The insurgency and violence of 1990s caused by the political and religious disputes necessitated militarisation in the territory. Violence and conflicts further emerged in the process of imposing law and order by troops in the forms of abduction and investigation of civilians on the pretext of suspicion stimulated the precarity of existence and identity of ordinary Kashmiris. In the case of Bashir’s novel, it narrates the uncertainty of existence, self and psyche of the protagonist Haleema, whose son goes missing in the militarised region giving her an indefinite status, ‘Half Mother’. The state of precarity discusses the sense of diffused identity and the vulnerability experienced by the victims of violence. Hence, this article employs Judith Butler’s concept of precarity explained in Precarious Lives to construe the state of vulnerability and the effectuated dehumanisation due to precarity of self through Shahnaz Bashir’s The Half Mother. Further, the paper also identifies the liminal state of the protagonist from the stages of self and existence questioning the human rights violations of the perpetrators.

Keywords: Kashmir conflict, precarity, self, vulnerability, human rights

Swathi, L, and Padmanabhan, B. “Precarity of Self: Identifying the Liminal Borders of Self in Shahnaz Bashir’s The Half MotherLitinfinite Journal, vol. 5, no. 2, Dec. 2023, pp. 46-54. https://doi.org/10.47365/litinfinite.5.2.2023.146-54.

Book Review

Reflection, Memory, and the Fine Art of Poetry: Reading Memories of Words by Jaydeep Sarangi

DOI: https://doi.org/10.47365/litinfinite.5.2.2023.55-58

Sreetanwi Chakraborty

Litinfinite Journal | Vol-5, Issue-2 | December, 2023 | Page: 55-58

Chakraborty, Sreetanwi. “Reflection, Memory, and the Fine Art of Poetry: Reading Memories of Words by Jaydeep Sarangi” Litinfinite Journal, vol. 5, no. 2, Dec. 2023, pp. 55-58. https://doi.org/10.47365/litinfinite.5.2.2023.155-58.

Reviewing Sohini Sen’s A Drop of Golden Sun: Re-presenting Tagore’s Gitanjali

DOI: https://doi.org/10.47365/litinfinite.5.2.2023.59-62

Dr. Lalitha Sarma

Litinfinite Journal | Vol-5, Issue-2 | December, 2023 | Page: 59-62

Sarma, Lalitha. “Reviewing Sohini Sen’s A Drop of Golden Sun: Re-presenting Tagore’s GitanjaliLitinfinite Journal, vol. 5, no. 2, Dec. 2023, pp. 59-62. https://doi.org/10.47365/litinfinite.5.2.2023.159-62.

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