LITINFINITE JOURNAL ISSN: 2582-0400 [Online] CODEN: LITIBR Peer-reviewed Journal of Literature and Social Sciences
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Litinfinite Journal 

Vol-5, Issue-1 | July, 2023

Himalayan Studies: Literature, Society and Globalization

Content

Litinfinite Journal | Vol-5, Issue-1 | July, 2023

Litinfinite Journal, Vol-5, Issue-1, (2nd July, 2023)

Content

Article Title

Authors

Pagination

Editorial

Sreetanwi Chakraborty

i-iv

Yoga ‘Walmart’ in the Himalayas: A Case of Wellness Centres in Dharamshala

Isha Jha, Dr. Uttam Singh

1-14

Gendered Identity in Community and Crafts of Himalayan Weavers

Dhriti Dhaundiyal, Surekha Dangwal

15-25

Cannibal Himalayas? Jamaica Kincaid’s Among Flowers: A Walk in the Himalaya

Puspa Damai

26-36

Himalayan Narratives: Cultural Reflections and Environmental Perceptions in Indian English Literature

Dr. Priyanka Singla

37-49

Review of Everything the Light Touches by Janice Pariat

Arpana Gurung

50-54

Vision through a Democratic Lens of Darjeeling: A Critical Reading of Democracy in Darjeeling by George Thadathil

Sreetanwi Chakraborty

55-60

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
Assistant Professor
Amity Institute of English Studies and Research
Amity University Kolkata

Himalayan Studies: Literature, Society, and Globalization is a vast trajectory in and beyond academia. Himalayan studies constitute not just a geopolitical area or any spatial analysis only. It is an in-depth study of the cultural and ritualistic patterns, daily activities, and the inheritance and retention of the indigeneity of the villages and communities in the Himalayas. There has been a major change in terms of development before the independence of India, and the post-independence phase in the lives, education, livelihood, democracy, pluralistic principles, economy, education, and in the role, status, and hierarchy of the people. Economic studies, social and literary studies, gender and sexuality studies, caste structure, policymaking, ethnicity, social experience, and myriad other factors are responsible for inculcating an open-endedness in the study of the Himalayan region. Along with that, there is also the growing fear of deforestation, consumerism, and construction due to tourism on a large scale that has affected the overall socio-political and cultural fabric of the Himalayas. Volume V, Issue I of Litinfinite Journal tries to find out this symbiotic and often contesting relationship among the several factors that determine the present and future of Himalayan Studies. It will be appropriate to contemplate upon what Arjun Guneratne has opined in his edited volume Culture and the Environment in the Himalaya:

       “Given that cultures are not unitary, homogeneous phenomena, universally shared by all members of a society, it might reasonably be asked whether we can speak of cognized environments in any meaningful sense. The alternative, however, is a radical particularism at the level of the individual, which is equally untenable.” (Guneratne 3)

He further adds that:

       “I draw on two concepts to reconcile the notion of a cognized environment with the fact that culture is not a unitary or homogeneous set of meanings: that of communication and of cultural scales.” (Guneratne 3)

It is a study of this cognized environment in the Himalayas that forms a pivotal point in the current issue of the journal. The first paper, Yoga ‘Walmart’ in the Himalayas: A Case of Wellness Centres in Dharamshala, by Isha Jha and Uttam Singh analyzes a large number of wellness and rejuvenation centres in Dharamshala, a city in Himachal Pradesh. They have discussed the concept of the backup economy, the state productivity and economic support and how these wellness centres form an integral part of Himalayan tourism. The retreats are not the only way through which the owners accumulate money, but they also have other decent sources of income that give them a steady sense of livelihood. The paper also focuses on the tenets of a neoliberal economic system and how the newfound stakeholders of neoliberalism are gradually catching up to the expectations of a culturally-superior market of entrepreneurs. The second paper of the issue, Gendered Identity in Community and Crafts of Himalayan Weavers has two authors. Dhriti Dhaundiyal and Surekha Dangwal discuss the quintessentially dynamic role that women play in the villages of Uttarakhand. Since there is a paucity of many commercial outposts, it is about the flourishing of the community handicrafts that enable the villages to sustain on a large scale. Women weavers in the Uttarakhand region earn a lumpsum amount of their livelihood by doing knitting and weaving works, thereby challenging, and subverting the inherently dominant ideas of the patriarchy and contributing not just on a domestic but also a commercial scale to the household and the economy. In this process of community weaving, the women of Uttarakhand are not just getting the right community support for indigenous work, but they are also contributing to the overall economic input of the state, by connecting to shops, retail marts, and customers.

The third paper of the current issue is by Puspa Damai, and his paper is titled Cannibal Himalayas? Jamaica Kincaid’s Among Flowers: A Walk in the Himalaya. This work by Kincaid, although essentially compartmentalized as travel writing, has multiple layers to it. It is about the explorations that the author makes in the course of her travel to Nepal, highlighting the discourse of both a postcolonial displacement and a study of the space narrative in the depiction of the garden. Damai, in his paper, discusses cannibalism in all its plausible senses that are available, by concentrating on the act of consuming or eating canonical works produced in literature, and simultaneously, resisting, breaking, and dismantling the legacy left by the forefathers of colonialism. The paper is an analytical depiction of what cannibalism is, what are the forces of cannibalism that we find in Kincaid’s work, and how the trope of cannibalism is used in the book.

The fourth paper of this issue is titled Himalayan Narratives: Cultural Reflections and Environmental Perceptions in Indian English Literature authored by Dr. Priyanka Singla. She writes about the inherently strong yet changing perception of the Himalayan environment in selected Indian English writing. She introduces the Himalayas as a region of irrevocable myths and undeniable forms of esoteric practice and then goes on expanding on the literary outputs of the region, including the indigenous communities and their narratives, oral, written, stories, poems, novels as literary works that hold up a mirror to the conceptualization of Himalayan writings in English.

The current issue also contains two book reviews. Arpana Gurung reviews Everything the Light Touches by Janice Pariat. The author focuses deep inside the various fragments of ecocritical perspectives and the characters of the novel that depict parallel journeys throughout and never meeting at intersecting points. It is about retaining the curiosity of the readers that the Pariat does, instead of directing or dictating anything to the readers. Gurung has pointed out eloquently how ‘this essence- of a journey, of how human beings are not stationary beings, of how they are constantly moving, evolving, becoming- has been captured by Pariat in a tone that made me ponder on the possibilities that lie beyond our comfort zone. A lesson from the nongiads, nomads that used to run freely across the mountains and the valleys- foraging, collecting, conserving, and never taking more than is necessary- this way of living – even if not possible today- but an inspiration to start living sustainably, by leaving nature as is and only using as much as is needed’ (Gurung 53). Finally, in this issue, I write a review of George Thadathil’s Democracy in Darjeeling, not just a text, but a collector’s item that dwells upon the haloed as well as the less-explored terrains of Darjeeling. Darjeeling has a chequered history of its own, with the colonial legacy holding large to dominate, educate and intensify the process of diverse cultural patterns, and the postcolonial infiltration and rapid globalization affecting the economy, socio-political, religious, and cultural factors in the years after independence. Darjeeling is not just a space that is studied in the book, but it is seen as a palpable entity, growing, and changing over time. It can very well be said to be a time-tested document that is also directed to the youths and the newer generation of learners who want to experiment with their thought processes in the understanding and rehabilitation of Darjeeling as the queen of hills.

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

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

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

 

Thanking You,

Sreetanwi Chakraborty

Editor-in-Chief

Litinfinite Journal

Kolkata

 

Reference:

Guneratne, Arjun. Culture and the Environment in the Himalaya. 2009, doi:10.4324/9780203864364.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Bio of the Editor – Sreetanwi Chakraborty is an Assistant Professor in Amity Institute of English Studies and Research, Amity University, Kolkata. She graduated from Presidency College Kolkata, did her Postgraduation from the University of Calcutta, and obtained her M. Phil from Rabindra Bharati University on The Sleeping Beauty Wakes Up: A Feminist Interpretation of Fairy Tales. This was published as a book in 2019, and it received the “Rising Star” Award for non-fiction category at New Town Book Fair, Kolkata. She has been the recipient of the “Charuchandra Ghosh Memorial Award” for securing the highest marks from Calcutta University. At present she is pursuing her Ph. D from Ranchi University. She is the Chief Editor of a bilingual biannual academic journal Litinfinite. Apart from academic publications in reputed national and international journals, her translations and literary articles have been published in Bengali and notable English journals and magazines in India, Bangladesh, and South Africa. Her areas of interest include Indian English poetry, Indian English drama, Feminism and cultural politics, and South Asian Diasporic Studies. She has passed 5th year in Rabindra Sangeet, with distinction and 4th year in classical music from Prayag Sangeet Samiti, Allahabad. She is a trained painter in oil, acrylic, water colour and charcoal. Her novel “Rhododendrons” published by Penprints Publication received a huge response in the International Kolkata Book Fair, 2023.

 

Yoga ‘Walmart’ in the Himalayas: A Case of Wellness Centres in Dharamshala

DOI: https://doi.org/10.47365/litinfinite.5.1.2023.1-14

Isha Jha

Dr. Uttam Singh

Litinfinite Journal | Vol-5, Issue-1 | July, 2023 | Page: 1-14

Yoga ‘Walmart’ in the Himalayas: A Case of Wellness Centres in Dharamshala

Isha Jha

Senior Research Fellow, Indian Institute of Technology Mandi, School of   Humanities and Social Sciences, Mandi, Himachal Pradesh, India.

Mail Id: [email protected] | Orcid- 0000-0002-6052-6616

 

Dr. Uttam Singh

Research Associate, Indian Institute of Technology Mandi, School of Humanities and Social Sciences, Himachal Pradesh, India.

Mail Id: [email protected]| Orcid- 0000-0001-7955-2614

This article explores the proliferating small-scale wellness centres such as Yoga, meditation, reiki, spas, and healing and rejuvenation therapies in a small town, Dharamshala. The expansion of such spaces has its interlinkages with the liberalization of the Indian market, expansion in consumer choices, shift in the nature of employment and retrenchment of everyday security in the post-reform period. These centres have become a source of employment for the unemployed youth in this small town, especially the pastoral tribe of Gaddis. Through an ethnographic study, the article establishes that deteriorating state support and retrenchment of security have not only induced these service providers to manoeuvre, improvise, employ jugaad to run their Yoga business but also engage themselves in multiple avenues, thereby keeping a ‘back-up’, in case the other avenues/ventures fail to earn a living. The article coins the term ‘back-up economy’ to provide a name to the processes, practices and strategies adopted by the service providers who in the scenario of shrinking state support and government services, as well as evolving forms of Yoga realize that ‘doing Yoga is not enough’ to survive in the market. The back-up economy would resonate with situation of youth struggling with the evolving state-market practices and shrinking state support and collectively defines such practices, processes that though informally, contributes to the employment situation in post-reform India.

Keywords: Dharamshala, Back-up economy, Jugaad, wellness, Yoga.

Jha, Isha., and Singh, Uttam. “Yoga ‘Walmart’ in the Himalayas: A Case of Wellness Centres in Dharamshala.” Litinfinite, vol. 5, no. 1, July 2023, pp. 1-14, doi:10.47365/litinfinite.5.1.2023.1-14.

Gendered Identity in Community and Crafts of Himalayan Weavers

DOI: https://doi.org/10.47365/litinfinite.5.1.2023.15-25

Dhriti Dhaundiyal

Surekha Dangwal

Litinfinite Journal | Vol-5, Issue-1 | July, 2023 | Page: 15-25

Gendered Identity in Community and Crafts of Himalayan Weavers

Dhriti Dhaundiyal

Assistant Professor, School of   Design, Doon University, Kedarpur, Dehradun: 248001 (Uttarakhand), India.

Mail Id: [email protected]| Orcid- 0000-0001-6929-1684

Surekha Dangwal

Vice Chancellor, Doon University, Kedarpur, Dehradun: 248001 (Uttarakhand), India.

Mail Id: [email protected]

Historically, women have run the villages in the Himalayan state of Uttarakhand in India, while men sought employment in the more industrialized nearby states, in the absence of local industry or commercial farming. Women have long been the backbone of the rural society and economy of Uttarakhand. They have also been the primary practitioners of crafts and builders of community in the hills. Although some research has documented the role of women in Uttarakhand in the creation and sustenance of livelihoods in difficult geographies, no such research has been undertaken in the craft sector specifically, leaving a lacuna in our understanding of traditional socioeconomic structures in the hills that have been sustained for many centuries. This paper is an exploratory study into the gendered identities of the women weavers in the villages of Uttarakhand and how the practice of this craft has created expressions of gender identity in craft work and the community, at a local, stakeholder and village network level. We document a case study in an organized craft cluster in the state of Uttarakhand in India using ethnographic methods. We used a narrative inquiry methodology to gather insights in this remote craft cluster. Narrative inquiry helped us explore the lived experiences of these crafts- women, exploring their subjectivity and processes of sense-making. We gained deep insights into the construction of beliefs, notions, and community perceptions among them that contribute to their sense of self and social identity.

Keywords: Gendered identity, Women weavers, Ethnography, Himalayan study.

Dhaundiyal, Dhriti., and Dangwal, Surekha. “Gendered Identity in Community and Crafts of Himalayan Weavers.” Litinfinite, vol. 5, no. 1, July 2023, pp. 15-25, doi:10.47365/litinfinite.5.1.2023.15-25.

Cannibal Himalayas? Jamaica Kincaid’s Among Flowers: A Walk in the Himalaya

DOI: https://doi.org/10.47365/litinfinite.5.1.2023.26-36.

Puspa Damai

Litinfinite Journal | Vol-5, Issue-1 | July, 2023 | Page: 26-36

Cannibal Himalayas? Jamaica Kincaid’s Among Flowers: A Walk in the Himalaya

Puspa Damai

Associate Professor of English at Marshall University, West Virginia, USA.

Mail Id: [email protected] | Orcid – 0009-0002-3861-3630

This paper examines Jamaica Kincaid’s Among Flowers: A Walk in the Himalaya through the lens of cannibalism. It shows how Kincaid uses the cannibal scene or cannibal talk by using the discourse a la Hulme of the absolute foreignness of the locale and the threat that the locale poses to the traveler’s life. Using Arens’ study as a guide, it shows how blood-sucking is a crucial aspect of cannibal talk illustrated in Kincaid’s text by the author’s encounter with the leeches. Obeyeskere’s study is used to argue that Kincaid’s mission to replicate and reconstruct the Christian Garden of Eden through her seed hunting in the Himalayas, and her “socialization” with figures such as Columbus and Cook resurrect the colonial dichotomy of garden and wilderness, thereby giving a second life to the discourse of savage cannibal native which was so rampant in European narratives of explorations. There is a brief presence of cannibal counter-memory through which Kincaid seeks to address her self-alienation by braiding her identity with the women from the Himalayas.

Keywords: Jamaica Kincaid, Himalayas, Cannibalism, Travel literature, Gardening.

Damai, Puspa. “Cannibal Himalayas? Jamaica Kincaid’s Among Flowers: A Walk in the Himalaya.” Litinfinite, vol. 5, no. 1, July 2023, pp. 26-36, doi:10.47365/litinfinite.5.1.2023.26-36.

Himalayan Narratives: Cultural Reflections and Environmental Perceptions in Indian English Literature

DOI: https://doi.org/10.47365/litinfinite.5.1.2023.37-49.

Dr. Priyanka Singla

Litinfinite Journal | Vol-5, Issue-1 | July, 2023 | Page: 37-49

Himalayan Narratives: Cultural Reflections and Environmental Perceptions in Indian English Literature

Dr. Priyanka Singla

Associate Prof. of English, Government College for Women, Hisar, Haryana, India.

Mail Id: [email protected] | Orcid – 0000- 0003-4538-9825

This paper discusses the portrayal of the salient features of the Himalayan region in Indian writing in English. It aims to analyze the representation of the natural beauty, cultural diversity, and historical significance of the region through the works of various Indian authors writing in English. Particular attention is paid to the themes, characterization, and literary techniques that contribute to the literary representation of the Himalayan region. The paper also examines the role of the Himalayan region in shaping the narrative structure and thematic development of selected literary texts. The Himalayan region, comprising the highest mountain range in the world, has been a constant source of fascination and inspiration for writers, poets, and essayists alike. As part of Indian literature, Indian writing in English has captured the essence of the region in various ways, ranging from travelogues, poems, and novels to essays and short stories. The grandeur and mystique of the Himalayas have shaped the creative imagination of these writers, evoking a strong sense of place and identity. By examining some of the major works of Indian authors writing in English, one can perceive how the features of the Himalayan region have been poignantly and profoundly depicted.

Keywords: Himalayan Region, IWE, Identity Loss, Natural, Cultural and Historical Features.

Singla, Priyanka. “Himalayan Narratives: Cultural Reflections and Environmental Perceptions in Indian English Literature.” Litinfinite, vol. 5, no. 1, July 2023, pp. 37-49, doi:10.47365/litinfinite.5.1.2023.37-49.

Book Review

Review of Everything the Light Touches by Janice Pariat

DOI: https://doi.org/10.47365/litinfinite.5.1.2023.50-54.

Arpana Gurung

Litinfinite Journal | Vol-5, Issue-1 | July, 2023 | Page: 50-54

Review of Everything the Light Touches by Janice Pariat

Arpana Gurung

Asst. Professor, Department of English, Govt. Sanskrit College, Samdong, East Sikkim, India.

Mail Id: [email protected] | Orcid – 0009-0002-5045-5903

This review is a reflection on the latest novel by Janice Pariat Everything The Light Touches (2023), published by Harper Collins. The book is a work of fiction that tells the stories of four characters who are times and world apart yet the narrative has intricately woven them together through myths, legends, and a beautiful bond with botany.

Keywords: North-East, myth, legend, eco-criticism, identity.

Gurung, Arpana. “Review of Everything the Light Touches by Janice Pariat.” Litinfinite, vol. 5, no. 1, July 2023, pp. 50-54, doi:10.47365/litinfinite.5.1.2023.50-54.

Vision through a Democratic Lens of Darjeeling: A Critical Reading of Democracy in Darjeeling by George Thadathil

DOI: https://doi.org/10.47365/litinfinite.5.1.2023.55-60.

Sreetanwi Chakraborty

Litinfinite Journal | Vol-5, Issue-1 | July, 2023 | Page: 55-60

Vision through a Democratic Lens of Darjeeling: A Critical Reading of Democracy in Darjeeling by George Thadathil

Sreetanwi Chakraborty

Assistant Professor, Amity Institute of English Studies and Research, Amity University Kolkata, West Bengal, India.

Mail Id: [email protected] | Orcid – 0000-0002-2936-222X

It is a review of the book Democracy in Darjeeling that is about the socio-political, philosophical, religious, and institutional growth in Darjeeling over the years. It is a careful study of the numerous educational patterns, community and cultural processes that define the plurality of the place, as well as retain the individual essence all throughout. Darjeeling is an integral metaphor in North Bengal, and it is not just a space, but a palpable entity in itself. Democracy, Pluralism and Globalisation have their own effects on Darjeeling and that is what the author has tried to enliven through his work.

Keywords: Democracy, Darjeeling Hills, Darjeeling Hill University, Society in Darjeeling, Darjeeling Religion, Pluralism.

Chakraborty, Sreetanwi. “Vision through a Democratic Lens of Darjeeling: A Critical Reading of Democracy in Darjeeling by George Thadathil.” Litinfinite, vol. 5, no. 1, July 2023, pp. 55-60, doi:10.47365/litinfinite.5.1.2023.55-60.

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