Contents
The Dichotomy of an Imprisoned Soul: Obi’s
Quest for Identity in Achebe’s No Longer at Ease
--Monir
A. Choudhury
A Postcolonial Study of Arnold Harrichand
Itwaru’s Shanti and Earl Lovelace’s The
Dragon Can’t Dance
--K.
T. Sunitha
Mapping the American and Indian Feminism
--Divya
Pande
A Christmas Gift
(Short Story)
--Ramesh
K. Srivastava
The Notion of Appropriation in Orhan Pamuk’s My Name is Red
--Mahmoud
Saberi
“Towards
Emancipation in Multicultural Milieu” – A Study of Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni’s
The Vine of Desire
--C.
Pradeepa
Cultural Encounter, Immigrant Psyche and
Identity Crisis in Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni’s The Mistress of Spices
--S. Ramya Niranjani
Selling of Poverty (Short Story)
--Pronab Kumar Majumder
--Rimi
Nath
Words and Cultural (Un)Translatability: A Subtextual Reading of The Hungry Tide in Indian Perspective
--Santanu
Basak
Beer Street; Gin Lane:
Hogarth’s Study in Eighteenth-Century London’s Subculture
--Sudeshna Majumdar
Fire Your Horoscope! (Short Story)
--K.
V. Dominic
Let Me Find My Talk: Song of Rita Joe: Autobiography of a Mi’kmaq
Poet
--K. Yeshoda Nanjappa
Emerging Selfhood: A Study of Tehmina Durrani’s My Feudal Lord
--Diler Singh
The Ruined Temple (Poem)
--Sitakant Mahapatra
The
Deities (Poem)
--Sitakant Mahapatra
I Am Man (Poem)
--Hazara
Singh
Glory of Woman (Poem)
--Hazara
Singh
A Tribute (Poem)
Pronab Kumar Majumder
Mother’s Lap--Marvellous Throne (Poem)
--Turlapati Rajeswari (Trans. S. V. Rama
Rao)
Lap of Nature (Poem)
Sugandha
Agarwal
Sparkling Droplets (Poem)
Sugandha Agarwal
Memories (Poem)
Sugandha Agarwal
Wail of a Female Foetus (Poem)
--Sangeeta
Mahesh
Poetic Pigments
of K. V. Dominic: A Critical
Study of Write Son, Write (Review
Article)
--Arbind Kumar Choudhary
Treatment of the Anxieties of Life in the Select Poems of Arundhathi Subramaniam (Review Article)
--S.
Ayyappa
Raja
K.
V. Dominic’s (ed.) African and Afro-American Literature: Insights and
Interpretations (Book Review)
--Mahboobeh
Khaleghi
K.
V. Dominic’s Multicultural
Consciousness in the Novels of R. K. Narayan. (Book Review)
--Dr. Y. Vidya
Our Esteemed Contributors
I have selected today, 5 June 2013—the World Environment
Day, to write this editorial. It’s worth brooding over this year’s
celebrations’ theme. It is “Think. Eat. Save.” Let me quote the UN Food and
Agriculture Organization’s (FAO) findings: “Every year 1.3 billion tonnes of
food is wasted. This is equivalent to the same amount produced in the whole of
sub-Saharan Africa. At the same time, 1 in every 7 people in the world go to
bed hungry and more than 20,000 children under the age of 5 die daily from hunger.
. . . While the planet is struggling to provide us with enough resources to
sustain its 7 billion people (growing to 9 billion by 2050), FAO estimates that
a third of global food production is either wasted or lost. Food waste is an
enormous drain on natural resources and a contributor to negative environmental
impacts. . . . If food is wasted,
it means that all the resources and inputs used in the production of all the
food are also lost. For example, it takes about 1,000 litres of water to produce
1 litre of milk and about 16,000 litres goes into a cow’s food to make a
hamburger. The resulting greenhouse gas emissions from the cows themselves, and
throughout the food supply chain, all end up in vain when we waste food. In
fact, the global food production occupies 25% of all habitable land and is
responsible for 70% of fresh water consumption, 80% of deforestation, and 30%
of greenhouse gas emissions. It is the largest single driver of biodiversity
loss and land-use change.”
Let us examine our food habits and
estimate the garbage that is thrown away from our kitchens. If we could avoid
such garbage and save some money for the hungry mouths in our neighbourhood or
even abroad we are serving a double duty of saving the starved as well as the
toxic environment. It is high time we keep economy in our banquets. How much of
food is served and wasted in wedding dinners? Let us bear in mind that all the inhabitants
on this planet have the right to share its resources and bounties. Denying
others food when you have surplus is equal to stealing the others. Let us think
deeply before we eat anything. Let us eat only what our body requires. Let us
thus save other fellow beings and the environment.
There
are eleven research articles, two review articles, three short stories, ten
poems of six poets and two book reviews in this issue. Before penning down let
me express my sincere most gratitude to all our esteemed contributors. The
credit of the book goes to each and every one of you. I am much grateful to my
Associate Editor, Dr. S. Kumaran who has been helping me almost every day.
Wishing all our readers enlightening and entertaining reading,
Love,
Thodupuzha
5
June 2013 Prof. K.
V. Dominic
No comments:
Post a Comment