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3 result(s) for "Homosexuality India Fiction."
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America for beginners
A widow from India travels to California to learn the truth about what happened to the son who was declared dead shortly after he revealed his sexual orientation to their traditional family.
WONDROUS CAPERS
The graphic novel is a relatively recent phenomenon in India, and the existing body of work has little in common with the flourishing mainstream comics industry. The most widely read Indian comics series is Amar Chitra Katha (ack), with around four hundred titles in over twenty languages. The philosophy of ack is that comics must tell what is pleasant and avoid what is unpleasant (Pritchett, “The World of Amar Chitra Katha,” 80). ack steers clear of polemic, ironing out creases in the fabric of national integration and presenting a highly selective view of India to a young audience. This approach
Acceptable Hints of Infinity
In 1882, at a reception at the Washington home of Judge Edward G. Loring, Oscar Wilde met Henry James, then the toast of literary salons in America for recently having published bothWashington SquareandPortrait of a Lady.¹ There began the end of one of the most unlikely friendships in international letters. Wilde, appearing in knee breeches and adorned with a large, yellow silk handkerchief, introduced himself to, among other dignitaries, an American general and a United States senator. James later wrote to Isabella Gardner that Wilde, whom he termed “fatuous” and “repulsive,” was ignored by everyone, although, if