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Indian Fiction Resurrecting The Mythical Past?
It has been 60 years since India gained Independence but be still like to write about our colonial past and how it has affected our present lives. Indian writers have been accused time again for being stuck in the mould of post colonial literature. Finally they have broken it by going into the distant past when no colonies or colonizers existed.
The
Flavour
Of
Indian
Fiction
Today..
Indian
fiction
is
now
busy
resurrecting
long
forgotten
Hindu
myths.
When
I
say
Hindu
it
does
not
refer
to
the
religion
in
particular.
It
merely
refers
to
the
Indian
way
of
life
that
has
developed
collectively
over
the
years.
Hindu
myths
are
more
historical
than
religious
in
that
way.
Did
you
know
for
example
that
there
are
33
million
Hindu
gods?
Actually,
most
modern
practicing
'Hindus'
didn't
know
any
better
until
some
bright
writer
came
along
to
write
about.
A Few Landmarks..
1. The Shiva Trilogy: It is the most recent sensation and therefore had to be the first on the list. While teenagers all over the world are going gaga over the Twilight series, there is another series of Indian fiction that is minting money. Management professional Amrish presented The Immortals Of Meluha to us and surprising the readers gulped it up. He presents Shiva (The Destroyer in the Holy Trinity) as a hero to us; a man in flesh and blood who rose to the status of God by his 'karma' or deeds. It is like a historical rendition of the man Shiva's life and it has caught on.
2. Myth = Mythiya: You will see this on the recommenced list of almost every famous bookstore. Unlike the Immortals of Meluha this is book is not Indian fiction but non fiction. Dr Patnaik, the author has presented more of an interesting research paper on Hindu myths and the subjective importance of Hindu gods in this book. The message is clear; we have 33 million 'gods' but only one 'God'. Hinduism is a religion of contradictions but they all say the same thing.
3. Palace Of Illusions: Retelling of legendary epics is another interesting development in Indian fiction. We are used to looking at our epics, especially Ramayana and Mahabharata in one particular way. This book tells the story of Mahabharata from the perspective of Draupadi or Panchaali and the story turns on it's head.
Why
It
Is
Working?
Indian
fiction
has
been
dwelling
on
post
colonial
literature
long
enough.
Although
the
likes
of
Amitav
Ghosh
have
brought
a
breath
of
fresh
air
to
this
genre,
it
is
done
to
death.
This
change
was
welcome;
not
only
by
us
so
called
'global'
Indian
who
know
little
about
their
mythical
past
but
also
by
the
world
at
large.
Indian
fiction
has
been
able
to
capitalize
on
the
saleability
of
any
philosophy
that
is
Indian.
Is
It
Controvertial?
Yes,
it
is
because
we
are
talking
about
an
era
that
has
no
written
records
but
controversy
theories
sell.
Look
at
Dan
Brown's
'Da
Vinci
Code'.
Moreover
all
of
our
history
is
controversial
so
why
not
make
the
most
of
it.



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