This lavishly illustrated history, with essays by eminent scholars, surveys English literature in India from the 1880s to the 1990s, from Rammohan to Rushdie. A wide-ranging account, this volume covers not only what is considered literature proper but also other genres such as polemical, anthropological, and wildlife writings.
Arvind Krishna Mehrotra was born in Lahore in 1947. He has published six collections of poetry in English and two of translation — a volume of Prakrit love poems, The Absent Traveller, recently reissued in Penguin Classics, and Songs of Kabir (NYRB Classics). His Oxford India Anthology of Twelve Modern Indian Poets (1992) has been very influential. He has edited several books, including History of Indian Literature in English (Columbia University Press, 2003) and Collected Poems in English by Arun Kolatkar (Bloodaxe Books, 2010). His collection of essays Partial Recall: Essays on Literature and Literary History was published by Permanent Black in 2012. A second book of essays, Translating the Indian Past (Permanent Black), appeared in 2019.
Mehrotra was nominated for the post of Professor of Poetry at the University of Oxford in 2009. He came second behind Ruth Padel, who later resigned over allegations of a smear campaign against Trinidadian poet Derek Walcott (who had himself earlier withdrawn from the election process).
Mehrotra has translated more than 200 literary works from ancient Prakrit language, and from Hindi, Bengali and Gujarati.
I have been explicitly looking for books on Indian English literature and apart from the efforts that were made by Sri Srinivas Iyengar Ji, I could not find anything worth (notable mentions are Sri Naik and one or two others). However, this book by MR Mehrotra is certainly worth a look and a deep reading. I could find many things notable, well-written and wonderfully explained. However, we do need a modern and current version of this book with all that is going around in the literary domain (English) because it lacks the 2nd decade of 21st-century and even lacks depth about the 1st decade as well.
This book was a phenomenal read. Very expansive and contextualised. A beautifully crafted collection of essays by some of the very best writers in the field. Probably one of the best pieces of work on this subject matter.