Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures
- Notes on Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Literary Pasts, Presents, and Futures
- 1 Beginnings: Rajmohan's Wife and the Novel in India
- 2 The Epistemic Work of Literary Realism: Two Novels from Colonial India
- 3 “Because Novels Are True, and Histories Are False”: Indian Women Writing Fiction in English, 1860–1918
- 4 When the Pen Was a Sword: The Radical Career of the Progressive Novel in India
- 5 The Road Less Traveled: Modernity and Gandhianism in the Indian English Novel
- 6 The Modernist Novel in India: Paradigms and Practices
- 7 “Handcuffed to History”: Partition and the Indian Novel in English
- 8 Women, Reform, and Nationalism in Three Novels of Muslim Life
- 9 Found in Translation: Self, Caste, and Other in Three Modern Texts
- 10 Emergency Fictions
- 11 Cosmopolitanism and the Sonic Imaginary in Salman Rushdie
- 12 Postcolonial Realism in the Novels of Rohinton Mistry
- 13 Far from the Nation, Closer to Home: Privacy, Domesticity, and Regionalism in Indian English Fiction
- 14 Ecologies of Intimacy: Gender, Sexuality, and Environment in Indian Fiction
- 15 Some Uses of History: Historiography, Politics, and the Indian Novel
- 16 Virtue, Virtuosity, and the Virtual: Experiments in the Contemporary Indian English Novel
- 17 Of Dystopias and Deliriums: The Millennial Novel in India
- 18 “Which Colony? Which Block?”: Violence, (Post-)Colonial Urban Planning, and the Indian Novel
- 19 Post-Humanitarianism and the Indian Novel in English
- 20 Chetan Bhagat: Remaking the Novel in India
- 21 “New India/n Woman”: Agency and Identity in Post-Millennial Chick Lit
- 22 The Politics and Art of Indian English Fantasy Fiction
- 23 The Indian Graphic Novel
- 24 “Coming to a Multiplex Near You”: Indian Fiction in English and New Bollywood Cinema
- 25 Caste, Complicity, and the Contemporary
- Works Cited
- Index
21 - “New India/n Woman”: Agency and Identity in Post-Millennial Chick Lit
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2015
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures
- Notes on Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Literary Pasts, Presents, and Futures
- 1 Beginnings: Rajmohan's Wife and the Novel in India
- 2 The Epistemic Work of Literary Realism: Two Novels from Colonial India
- 3 “Because Novels Are True, and Histories Are False”: Indian Women Writing Fiction in English, 1860–1918
- 4 When the Pen Was a Sword: The Radical Career of the Progressive Novel in India
- 5 The Road Less Traveled: Modernity and Gandhianism in the Indian English Novel
- 6 The Modernist Novel in India: Paradigms and Practices
- 7 “Handcuffed to History”: Partition and the Indian Novel in English
- 8 Women, Reform, and Nationalism in Three Novels of Muslim Life
- 9 Found in Translation: Self, Caste, and Other in Three Modern Texts
- 10 Emergency Fictions
- 11 Cosmopolitanism and the Sonic Imaginary in Salman Rushdie
- 12 Postcolonial Realism in the Novels of Rohinton Mistry
- 13 Far from the Nation, Closer to Home: Privacy, Domesticity, and Regionalism in Indian English Fiction
- 14 Ecologies of Intimacy: Gender, Sexuality, and Environment in Indian Fiction
- 15 Some Uses of History: Historiography, Politics, and the Indian Novel
- 16 Virtue, Virtuosity, and the Virtual: Experiments in the Contemporary Indian English Novel
- 17 Of Dystopias and Deliriums: The Millennial Novel in India
- 18 “Which Colony? Which Block?”: Violence, (Post-)Colonial Urban Planning, and the Indian Novel
- 19 Post-Humanitarianism and the Indian Novel in English
- 20 Chetan Bhagat: Remaking the Novel in India
- 21 “New India/n Woman”: Agency and Identity in Post-Millennial Chick Lit
- 22 The Politics and Art of Indian English Fantasy Fiction
- 23 The Indian Graphic Novel
- 24 “Coming to a Multiplex Near You”: Indian Fiction in English and New Bollywood Cinema
- 25 Caste, Complicity, and the Contemporary
- Works Cited
- Index
Summary
This chapter examines post-millennial, Indian “Chick Lit” narratives against older narratives of Indian female experience, both written by female Indian authors in English. I focus on key moments of decision-making from both eras of fiction production, with an overarching interest in demonstrating how the post-millennial Indian Chick Lit novel is a site for the articulation and contestation of modernity in India. Given that the two post-millennial works discussed here have been primarily marketed and distributed within India, resulting in restricted sales outside of India (and/or the wider region of South Asia) at the time of their initial publication, this chapter also considers how India's literary scene makes connections with today's world literature paradigms. In doing so, I hope to challenge the orthodoxy of the “postcolonial Indian novel.” The fact that Chick Lit has seen exponential growth in India post millennium demonstrates that traditional hierarchies of fiction are being somewhat dismantled. Through the rise of popular or “commercial” fiction, the Indian literary scene has changed considerably in the last decade, and Chick Lit has played a fundamental role in this shift in terms of both production and consumption.
This chapter focuses on moments of women's decision-making in what I see as two distinct eras of women's writing in the Indian novel: the more literary, postcolonial phase of the 1980s into the late 1990s, and a new phase of Chick Lit in the last ten or so years. Looking at how decisions are made and followed through on, along with society's responses to those decisions, the chapter considers important changes in women's writing in the last few decades. I suggest that today's post-millennial female protagonists make life-changing decisions with a certain freedom of choice that was less readily available to their earlier counterparts. This point is important given the common perception that decision-making in Chick Lit novels is flippant and frivolous, revolving around which shoes to wear or which outfit to buy. In the Chick Lit discussed here, “serious” moments of decision-making are presented within a larger context in which female characters feel “lost” in the world. As in the earlier texts, decision-making is presented as difficult. Yet despite their difficulty, these texts' post-millennial women emerge as more settled and fulfilled characters by the end of their narratives.
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- A History of the Indian Novel in English , pp. 324 - 336Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2015
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