Introduction
Sudha Shastri
SECTION 1: PREVIEW
1. The Rhetoric of Choice
Supriya Chaudhuri
2. Erasures, Silences and Recodings: The Writer in Search of Meaning
Jasbir Jain
SECTION 2: TEXTS
3. ‘All Things Done Unto Edifying’: Anne Dowriche and the Play of History
Debapriya Basu
4. Politics of Representing Gender Violence Jyotirmoyee Devi’s The River Churning:
Paulomi Chakraborty
5. ‘The Question is the Story Itself’: Multiplicity of Disnarration in Paul Auster’s The New York Trilogy
Shinjini Chattopadhyay
6. The Politics of Disnarration: Nation and Narrative in The Storyteller
Sreya Dutt
7. Historical Fiction, Disnarrated and the Communal Stratagem: Questioning the Counterfactual Constructions of History in Bankim Chandra Chattopadhyay’s Anandamath and Kanaiyalal Maneklal Munshi’s Jay Somanatha
Rohit Dutta Roy
8. His Story, Her Story and History: Competing Stories in Louise Erdrich’s Tracks
David Jeyaraj Franklin
9. Tricksters, Rebels and Wandering Narratives in Thomas King’s Green Grass, Running Water
Anushka Sen
10. Disnarration and Disability: Exploring Narrative and Corporeal Logics
Vinita Singh
11. Do these Ruins Narrate our Pasts? An Examination of W.G. Sebald’s Narratives:
Krishnan Unni. P
12. Marketing Democracy to a Dictatorship: Pablo Larraín’s No and the Pragmatics of National Narratives
Nisha Viswanathan