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Majumdar, Saikat

Majumdar, Saikat

The Critic as Amateur

  • "The Critic as Amateur" by Saikat Majumdar
  • Alumni Author: Majumdar, Saikat
  • Year: 2005
  • Publisher / Date: Bloomsbury Academic, 2019

Can the criticism of literature and culture ever be completely professionalized? Does criticism retain an amateur impulse even after it evolves into a highly specialized discipline enshrined in the university?

The Critic as Amateur brings leading and emerging scholars together to explore the role of amateurism in literary studies. While untrained reading has always been central to arenas beyond the academy – book clubs, libraries, used bookstores – its role in the making of professional criticism is often disavowed or dismissed. This volume, the first on the critic as amateur, restores the links between expertise, autodidactic learning and hobbyist pleasure by weaving literary criticism in and out of the university.

Our contributors take criticism to the airwaves, through the culture of early cinema, the small press, the undergraduate classroom and extracurricular writing groups. Canonical critics are considered alongside feminist publishers and queer intellectuals. The Critic as Amateur is a vital book for readers invested in the disciplinary history of literary studies and the public role of the humanities. It is also a crucial resource for anyone interested in how literary criticism becomes a richly diverse yet shared discourse in the 20th and 21st centuries.

Play House

  • "Play House" by Saikat Majumdar
  • Alumni Author: Majumdar, Saikat
  • Year: 2005
  • Publisher / Date: The Permanent Press, 2017

For ten-year-old Ori, his mother's life as a theatre actress holds as much fascination as it does fear.

Approaching adolescence in an unstable home, he is haunted by her nightly stage appearances, and the suspicion and resentment her profession evokes in people around her, at home and among their neighbors. Increasingly consumed by an obsessive hatred of the stage, Ori is irrevocably drawn into a pattern of behavior that can only have catastrophic consequences.

Political bullies, actors and actresses, hairdressers, set boys and backstage crew make up the world of Play House , a haunting exploration of a young boy stumbling into adulthood far ahead of his years.

This is the first US edition of one of the most widely read and acclaimed recent Indian works of literary fiction.

Prose of the World: Modernism and the Banality of Empire

  • "Prose of the World: Modernism and the Banality of Empire" by Saikat Majumdar
  • Alumni Author: Majumdar, Saikat
  • Year: 2005
  • Publisher / Date: Columbia University Press, 2013

Everyday life in the far outposts of empire can be static, empty of the excitement of progress. A pervading sense of banality and boredom are, therefore, common elements of the daily experience for people living on the colonial periphery. Saikat Majumdar suggests that this impoverished affective experience of colonial modernity significantly shapes the innovative aesthetics of modernist fiction.

Prose of the World explores the global life of this narrative aesthetic, from late-colonial modernism to the present day, focusing on a writer each from Ireland, New Zealand, South Africa, and India. Ranging from James Joyce’s deflated epiphanies to Amit Chaudhuri’s disavowal of the grand spectacle of postcolonial national allegories, Majumdar foregrounds the banal as a key instinct of modern and contemporary fiction—one that nevertheless remains submerged because of its antithetical relation to literature’s intuitive function to engage or excite.

Majumdar asks us to rethink the assumption that banality merely indicates an aesthetic failure. If narrative is traditionally enabled by the tremor, velocity, and excitement of the event, the historical and affective lack implied by the banal produces a narrative force that is radically new precisely because it suspends the conventional impulses of narration.

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