Continuities/departures :
Material type: TextPublication details: Colombo : Vijitha Yapa Publications, 2011Edition: 1st edDescription: ix, 165 pagesISBN: 9556651446; 9789556651447 Subject(s): Sri Lankan literature (English) | Women and literatureDDC classification: 820.82 Summary: Contributed articles emanating from a conference organized by Women's Education and Research Centre, Colombo, Sri Lanka. This volume contains a significant collection of essays that looks at contemporary Sri Lankan women's creative writing in English. These essays capture a range of interests, issues, voices and even texts and attest to a vibrant and creatively alive culture and literature that has through time evolved in many different directions. The continuities/departures and border crossings seen in the essays point to ways in which creative writing in English by contemporary Sri Lankan women can be read. The essays, demonstrating in their own way directions that new research can undertake in the intersecting fields of Sri Lankan English and Women's studies, are by Dinali Fernando, Dushyanthi Mendis, Ruhanie Perera, Tara Senanayaka, Sivamohan Sumathy, Pavithra Tantrigoda and Maithree Wickramasinghe.Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Lending Books | Main Library Stacks | Reference | 820.82 CON (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 013863 |
Contributed articles emanating from a conference organized by Women's Education and Research Centre, Colombo, Sri Lanka.
This volume contains a significant collection of essays that looks at contemporary Sri Lankan women's creative writing in English. These essays capture a range of interests, issues, voices and even texts and attest to a vibrant and creatively alive culture and literature that has through time evolved in many different directions. The continuities/departures and border crossings seen in the essays point to ways in which creative writing in English by contemporary Sri Lankan women can be read. The essays, demonstrating in their own way directions that new research can undertake in the intersecting fields of Sri Lankan English and Women's studies, are by Dinali Fernando, Dushyanthi Mendis, Ruhanie Perera, Tara Senanayaka, Sivamohan Sumathy, Pavithra Tantrigoda and Maithree Wickramasinghe.
There are no comments on this title.