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Conversations in Bloomsbury
New revised edition, with an Introduction by Saros Cowasjee
Mulk Raj Anand
Conversations in Bloomsbury : Mulk Raj Anand : Vision Books : Book (ISBN: 8170948185)
Pages: 192
Price: Rs. 250 Format: Paperback
ISBN13/10: 9788170948186 / 8170948185
Availability: Yes
Published in 2011
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Table of Contents
Conversations
in Bloomsbury occupies a distinct place in Mulk Raj Anand's writings. Outside of
his fiction it is the most significant of his works and, along with
Apology for Heroism, is the key to understanding Anand's literary, social
and political beliefs.
Living in
London
from 1925 to 1945, Anand came to know the prominent writers and intellectuals
of the metropolis, many of whom belonged to what came to be known as the
Bloomsbury Group. In twenty engrossing chapters, he recalls his wide-ranging
conversations with E.M. Forster, Aldous Huxley, Leonard and Virginia Woolf,
Clive Bell, C.E.M. Joad, T.S. Eliot and several others.
The four chapters on the enigmatic T.S.
Eliot are the highlight of the book. They offer a penetrating and sympathetic
understanding of Eliot's mind and reveal Anand's capacity not to allow his
own personal view of the man to cloud his admiration for the poet's literary
achievements.
In the imaginative rendering of his actual
conversations, Anand has faithfully, often evocatively, captured the literary,
cultural and political climate of England of the 1920s and 1930s. The book
reveals both Anand's ambivalence towards the Bloomsbury Group as well as the
ambivalent attitude of the British literati towards India's freedom.
Together, the chapters metamorphose into a long autobiographical essay about the
writer discovering his convictions and his nationalistic roots in a foreign
land.
Click
here to read select chapters from this book
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| Reviews
| "Conversations in Bloomsbury occupies a distinct place in Mulk Raj Anand's writings" — NBT Newsletter |
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| "As an interpreter of the East to the West, Mulk Raj Anand is among the most remarkable of contemporary novelists." — Glasgow Herald |
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| "The book differs from previous editions by being painstakingly edited and in carrying an insightful Introduction by Saros Cowasjee on how this remarkable work came to be written" — Shyamala A. Narayan, Jamia Millia Islamia University, New Delhi |
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| "Conversations in Bloomsbury is about a colonial's relentless struggle to decolonize himself. It reveals Anand as a significant writer and an uncompromising patriot." — K.D. Verma, Editor, South Asian Review |
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Mulk Raj Anand
Mulk Raj Anand
(1905-2004) was born in Peshawar and
educated at the universities of Punjab
and London. After earning his Ph.D. in
Philosophy in 1929, Anand began writing
notes for T. S. Eliot’s magazine
Criterion as well as books on
diverse subjects such as cooking and the
arts.
Recognition came with the publication of
his first two novels, Untouchable
(1935) and Coolie (1936). These
were followed, among others, by his
well-known trilogy The Village
(1939), Across the Black Waters
(1940) and The Sword and the
Sickle (1942). By the time he
returned to
India in 1946, he was the best-known
Indian writer abroad.
Making Bombay (now Mumbai) his home and
centre of activity, Anand plunged with
gusto into India’s cultural and social
life. Writing remained, however, his
main
pre-occupation, and in 1953 he published
Private Life of an Indian Prince
— his finest literary achievement. In
1980 appeared his best non-fictional
work,
Conversations in Bloomsbury
(revised ed. 2011) — a wide-ranging
dialogue
with T. S. Eliot, Aldous Huxley,
Virginia Woolf and others. He also
founded and
edited the renowned Indian art magazine
Marg, and worked ceaselessly on
his monumental autobiographical fiction,
The Seven Ages of Man.
A recipient of the Sahitya
Akademi award, the Padma Bhushan and
several honorary doctorates, Anand's
complete papers are now housed in the
National Archives of India in New Delhi.
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