‘This volume of critical essays on colonialism and modernity revisits the episteme of “modernity” in a new way by taking into account its non-Western roots .... By combining a pragmatic and empirical approach with a vision of a possible theory of comparative literature born out of an encounter between indigenous and colonial forces, the central thesis of this volume provides a new orientation to comparative literary studies at the present time.’
- Prafulla Kar, Director, Centre for Contemporary Theory, Baroda and former Professor of English, University of Baroda
‘ ... This wonderfully stimulating collection of essays brings out the multiple facets of the novel with almost equal freedom by juxtaposing and comparing it to novels across time, regions, as well as cultures. Surely a first in postcolonial studies!’
- Vasudha Dalmia, Professor of Hindi and Modern South Asian Studies, University of California, Berkeley
‘The subaltern speaks in this path-breaking collection on comparative modernities and the interlocking literatures it spawned in the late- nineteenth-century colonial period .... Encompassing a variety of theoretical and historical approaches, the essays attest to Senapati's enduring significance while modeling a comparison that remaps transnational modernist studies.’
- Susan Stanford Friedman, Virginia Woolf Professor of English and Women's Studies, University of Wisconsin-Madison