Id already studied English and French Literature at the University of Mumbai, so Comparative Literature sounded like a wonderful way to bring the two together, and since I spoke French, it made sense to do it in Paris. My favorite theorist was G矇rard Genette: I loved his idea that a text is like a piece of parchment that has been reused so that earlier layers of writing remain slightly visible under newer texts. As he puts it, 竄泭on peut y lire, par transparence, lancien sous le nouveau泭罈 (you can read the old layers under the new, just as you would with a palimpsest held against the light).泭In a way, this transparent tradition means that you can see remnants of the Ramayana or the Iliad in todays postcolonial epics.
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I guess that as an Indian in Paris, I was very interested in international community in Paris. And as Herman Melville says, we expatriate ourselves to nationalize with the universe, so 91勛圖厙seemed like a good place to nationalize with the worldif not the universe! It was also an opportunity to have the best of two worlds: the pluridisciplinarity of the American system in the pluralistic city of Paris.
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English, Hindi (Indias national language), and Marathi, since I was born and brought up in Mumbai. I also grew up surrounded by my parents regional languages, Bengali and Punjabi. Later, in school, I learned French and dabbled in Italian and Spanish.
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I was lucky enough to have very inspiring French teachers in India. Ive always been a bit of a parrot, I like imitating people, and a useless quirk like that can actually prove useful when youre learning a language.
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You cant not be interested in epics in India because theyre always with you. Theyre in comic books, on television, in music, theyre part of the stories that we tell in our festivals: theyre omnipresent and they remain alive because theyre popular.
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We have our four holy books, the Vedas, the Mahabarata and the Ramayana, which are narrative versions of the philosophy and religious content of the scriptures. Theyre stories within stories within stories, an endless, china box structure, from which other stories migrate to different contexts and languages. It would be as if the Aeneid was written in Latin and then you had versions of it in French and German, which is actually what did happen with the epic tradition in Western literature, but it remained very courtly, whereas in India, the elite and the popular interacted with each other.
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All three are exploring how identity and history can happen on the ocean. Melville takes a rooted, nation-centered formthe epicto talk about decentered and nomadic subjects, which speaks to contemporary readers, since contemporary history is a product of migration and human mobility. Meanwhile, Walcott is interested in the legacy of slavery and the Middle Passage, while Ghosh is talking about Indian indentured labor.
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Yes, because the epic still speaks to us. Writers like Edouard Glissant and Kamau Brathwaite are now exploring how individual and collective identities are shaped by oceanic experience, while also using characteristics that recur across classical/ancient epics. I like seeing those characteristics emerge so that in each epic, youre looking at previous layers of previous texts.
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Ill be teaching a class where well look at Paris from a postcolonial perspective. We sometimes have a de-politicized view of Paris, where it becomes an ahistorical entity of art and culture and romantic love. That absence speaks volumes, so well be coming to terms with the broader historical narrative of Frances colonial past that, in a way, the City of Light dazzles us out of seeing.
Its important to have a sense of how ones readers will experience things.
91勛圖厙has been the perfect way to finish my undergraduate studies.
The amount of emphasis my professors placed on studentteacher contact was very special.