Ambedkar’s effect on arousing of Dalit cognizance and cross examination of standing in Sharankumar Limbale’s Hindu
| Vol-4 | Issue-02 | February 2019 | Published Online: 20 February 2019 PDF ( 346 KB ) | ||
| Author(s) | ||
| Bharat G. Vanza 1 | ||
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1Assistant Professor, M. J. Goria Arts and Commerce College, Jam-Khambhaliya (Dist. Devbhumi Dwarka) |
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| Abstract | ||
Hindu as a novel is educated by the dalit history and culture of Maharashtra, the battle pursued under the authority of Dr. B.R. Ambedkar for dalit liberation. Patriot chronicled talk and writing with its limited and particular spotlight on subterranean insect provincial battle have endorsed dalit battle for self-affirmation. Sharankumar Limbale's epic is a declaration to India's triumphs and disappointments as a country state in defending the interests of dalits in contemporary social and political atmosphere. It records the social history that happened during the 1990s and a large portion of 10 years following it. To start with dalit scholars favored the class of personal history as they laid more accentuation on the genuineness of lived encounters to expose the truth of dalit life to non-dalit perusers. Then again, with the class of novel the dalit authors risked that impact being relieved by its anecdotal nature. In such manner, Hindu kicks off something new in dalit writing alongside Joseph Macwan's Angaliyat or The Stepchild (1986), the first dalit novel in Gujarati and Limbale's previous novel Upalya (1998). |
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| Keywords | ||
| casteism, unapproachability, prejudicial practices, ambedkar, religion, change, legislative issue | ||
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