Chapter 1 Preface Part 2 I. (In)fusion Approach: The Critical Manifesto Part 3 II. (In)fusion Approach: Theory, Contestation, Limits: 'Thinking' Text and (In)fusion Theory; Postcoloniality, Reading, and Theory; The Ethics of (In)fusion; Cyberspace: (Im)porting (In)fusion Theory; Post-colonial Horizon Part 4 III. (In)fusionizing a Few Indian English Novels: The Epigon Coming the First: Midnight's Children as the Postmodern Authentic; Taking "Experience" Seriously in Anita Desai's The Village By the Sea; "Tents blooming in the coconu Part 5 IV. Epilogue Chapter 6 Writing, Indian English Literature and (In)fusion Chapter 7 Index Chapter 8 About the Contributors Chapter 9 About the Editor
Ranjan Ghosh is a Professor in the Department of English at Wroclaw University in Poland. He has published numerous articles on comparative aesthetics, critical theory, Indian English Literature, historical theory and Indian historiography.
We have heard about the death of theory for a decade, but of course
the real question is what are the possibilities of theory now. This
volume, with its sterling cast of contributors, offers some
answers. It argues for a programmatic heterogeneity, fusing
theories without disciplinary prejudice.
*Jeffrey J. Williams, Editor, Editor,The Minnesota Review;
Co-Editor The Norton Anthology of Theory and Criticism*
Theory has always been interdisciplinary in its aims and purposes.
But with the proliferation of Theory in the last decades, theories
tended to degenerate into mere variants of the outmoded
disciplinary approaches. So what we presently need, above all, is
an interdisciplinary approach to Theory. This is what the
(In)fusion paradigm proposed in this volume admirably realizes. It
does so not only by means of theoretical reflection, but by also
giving convincing examples of what the new paradigm may bringgg
*Frank Ankersmit, Groningen University*
Theory has always been interdisciplinary in its aims and purposes.
But with the proliferation of Theory in the last decades, theories
tended to degenerate into mere variants of the outmoded
disciplinary approaches. So what we presently need, above all, is
an interdisciplinary approach to Theory. This is what the
(In)fusion paradigm proposed in this volume admirably realizes. It
does so not only by means of theoretical reflection, but by also
giving convincing examples of what the new paradigm may bring
*Frank Ankersmit, Groningen University*
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