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         Mukherjee Bharati:     more books (100)
  1. Bharati Mukherjee (Twayne's United States Authors Series) by Fakrul Alam, 1995-11
  2. Imaginary Homelands of Writers in Exile: Salman Rushdie, Bharati Mukherjee, and V. S. Naipaul by Cristina, Emanuela Dascalu, 2007-11-28
  3. Darkness by Bharati Mukherjee, 1992-03-22
  4. TIGER'S DAUGHTER. by Bharati. MUKHERJEE, 1971
  5. Jasmine by Bharati. Mukherjee, 2005
  6. Jasmine by Bharati Mukherjee, 1995-09-06
  7. Political Culture and Leadership in India (A Study of West Bengal) by Bharati Mukherjee, 1992-05
  8. Jasmine Edition by Bharati Mukherjee, 1990-04-26
  9. The Borzoi Reader: Volume 5 #3. Fall 1993 by James and Susanna Moore, Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Elizabeth Tallent, John Banville, Bharati Mukherjee, Cormac McCarthy Merrill, 1993
  10. The Sorrow and the Terror: The Haunting Legacy of the Air India Tragedy by Clark Blaise, Bharati Mukherjee, 1988-05-26
  11. The Holder of the World by Bharati Mukherjee, 1993
  12. Fiction of Bharati Mukerjee: A Cultural Perspective by Nagendra Kumar, 2001-01-01
  13. Three great Indian women novelists: Anita Desai, Shashi Deshpande and Bharati Mukherjee (Creative new literature's series) by Indira Nityanandam, 2000
  14. Bharati Mukherjee. Desirable Daughters.(Book Review): An article from: World Literature Today by Ramlal Agarwal, 2003-10-01

21. Holders Of The Word: An Interview With Bharati Mukherjee
In her epilogue to Days and Nights in Calcutta , bharati mukherjee proclaims the spirit that motivates her writing Even more than other writers,
http://social.chass.ncsu.edu/jouvert/v1i1/bharat.htm
Holders of the Word:
An Interview with Bharati Mukherjee
by
Tina Chen and S.X. Goudie
University of California, Berkeley
  • In her epilogue to Days and Nights in Calcutta , Bharati Mukherjee proclaims the spirit that motivates her writing: "Even more than other writers, I must learn to astonish, to shock" (299). Bharati Mukherjee has indeed produced a body of work that both sustains wonder and evokes surprise. The author of four novels: The Tiger's Daughter Wife Jasmine , and The Holder of the World ; two short-story collections, Darkness and The Middleman and Other Stories ; as well as The Sorrow and the Terror and Days and Nights in Calcutta , two works of non-fiction co-authored with her husband Clark Blaise, Mukherjee has deliberately, sometimes flamboyantly, fused her many impulses, backgrounds, and selves to create a "new immigrant" literature that embodies her sense of what it means to be a woman writer of Bengali-Indian origin who has lived in, and been indelibly marked by, both Canada and the United States. In the process, she has broken boundaries and refused to limit herself to easy categories. She sees herself as a pioneerof new territories, experiences, and literaturesand coextensive with her mission to explore new worlds is her intention to disturb what came before.
  • In interviewing Professor Mukherjee for Jouvert: a journal of postcolonial studies , we utilized an interviewing strategy that negotiated the intersections of her artistic vision and the questions and concerns raised by critics in response to it. Professor Mukherjee, a writer who also prides herself on being a scholar and a critic, responded graciously to the challenges of such a conversation. Conducted during the summer of 1996, the interview addresses a constellation of questions and issues on the process of writing, reading, and interpreting fiction. Even as critical sites of possible alliance between Professor Mukherjee and the postcolonial studies community dot the surface of the interview, many of the disagreements that exist between them are cast into relief. Together, these locations map the beginnings of a productive and exciting literary cartography.
  • 22. US Dept Of State - Publications
    bharati mukherjee, author and professor of English at the University of California, Berkeley, is well known both as a writer of fiction and as a social
    http://usinfo.state.gov/products/pubs/writers/mukherjee.htm
    USINFO Publications WRITERS ON AMERICA Introduction Elmaz Abinader
    Just off Main Street
    Julia Alvarez
    Sven Birkerts

    The Compulsory Power

    of American Dreams
    Robert Olen Butler
    A Postcard from America
    Michael Chabon
    Maps and Legends
    Billy Collins
    What's American About

    American Poetry?
    Robert Creeley
    America's American
    David Herbert Donald
    On Being an American
    Historian Richard Ford How Does Being an American Inform What I Write? Linda Hogan For Life's Sake Mark Jacobs Both Sides of the Border Charles Johnson An American Milk Bottle Bharati Mukherjee On Being an American Writer Naomi Shihab Nye This Crutch That I Love Robert Pinsky A Provincial Sense of Time On Being an American Writer by Bharati Mukherjee Bharati Mukherjee , author and professor of English at the University of California, Berkeley, is well known both as a writer of fiction and as a social commentator. Her most recent novel is Desirable Daughter (Hyperion, 2002). Her other novels are The Holder of the World Jasmine Wife (1975), and The Tiger's Daughter (1971). Her short stories are to be found in The Middleman and Other Stories (1988), and in

    23. Bharati Mukherjee, Jaydeep's Notable Writers
    Born in Calcutta on July 27, 1940, to an upperclass Bengali Brahmin parents, Sudhir Lal and Bina Banerjee, bharati was the second of three daughters.
    http://www.geocities.com/Colosseum/Park/9801/bharati.html
    Notable Asian American Writers
    Bharati Mukherjee
    Novelist/Writer
    An Indian immigrant married to a Canadian,Mukherjee has captured the chaos of the melting pot in her short stories and novels about the South Asia, particularly the Indian, immigrant experiences in America. A professor of Engilsh at the University of California at Berkeley, she is the author of more than a dozen of books, novels and several short stories,many which are drawn from her own experiences as an immigrant. She depicts from the clash of cultures and the ensuing dilemmas and successes with unique understanding and startling sensitivity. Her writing have held a mirror up to the south Asian community in North America.
    A cross-cultural writer, Mukherjee has won several grants and awards from the Canadian government, universities, and the Guggenheim Foundation. She received the National Magazine Award in 1981 for her essay "An Invisible woman." Prior to that she won the first prize from the Periodical Distribution Association for her story, "Isolated Incidents." However, it was in 1988 when she won the National Book Critics Circle Award for best fiction that Mukherjee's work received national attention. The award was for her collection of short stories, The Middleman and Other Stories

    24. The BEATRICE Interview: 1997
    Devi Dee, the selfrechristened protagonist of bharati mukherjee s latest novel, Leave It To Me, isn t happy. Abandoned by her American mother and Eurasian
    http://www.beatrice.com/interviews/mukherjee/
    Bharati Mukherjee
    Outsider Looking In, Insider Looking Beyond
    interviewed by Ron Hogan Devi Dee, the self-rechristened protagonist of Bharati Mukherjee's latest novel, Leave It To Me , isn't happy. Abandoned by her American mother and Eurasian father in an Indian orphanage in the late '60s, she was adopted by a New York family and grew up as Debbie DiMartino. Now she's 23 and wants to track down her biological mother but the last thing on her mind is a heartwarming family reunion. Her quest leads her to San Francisco, a city that Mukherjee, who was born and raised in Calcutta but has lived in America for over thirty years, knows extremely well. Her knowledge of the city and the precarious mental and moral states of some of its inhabitants makes itself known in every tightly wound sentence of this novel, while her dark, sarcastic sense of humor manages to peep through even as the body count begins to climb. RH: What's it like to spend so much time writing about a protagonist who's basically unlikable, even reprehensible? BM: I kind of like her, actually.

    25. Heath Anthology Of American LiteratureBharati Mukherjee - Author Page
    bharati mukherjee is one of the bestknown South Asian American woman writers. She has stated that she wants to be viewed not as a hyphenated South
    http://college.hmco.com/english/lauter/heath/4e/students/author_pages/contempora
    Site Orientation Heath Orientation Timeline Galleries Access Author Profile Pages by: Fifth Edition Table of Contents Fourth Edition Table of Contents Concise Edition Table of Contents Authors by Name ... Internet Research Guide Textbook Site for: The Heath Anthology of American Literature , Fifth Edition
    Paul Lauter, General Editor
    Bharati Mukherjee
    (b.
    Bharati Mukherjee is one of the best-known South Asian American woman writers. She has stated that she wants to be viewed not as a hyphenated South Asian–American writer but as an American writer. In a televised interview with Bill Moyers ( Bill Moyers: A World of Ideas II, New York: Doubleday, 1990) she commented, “I feel very American...I knew the moment I landed as a student in 1961...that this is where I belonged. It was an instant kind of love.”
    One wonders, however, if one can really discard a part of one’s personal/political history even in the process of transformation, especially since the past displays a tenacious, trickster-like ability to appear at the oddest times and in the most astonishing disguises. The insistence on being known as an American, without acknowledging one’s Asian heritage, may grate on those who see the term “American” as denoting the Euro -American socio-politically dominant group only. For those of us who feel that it is absolutely necessary to continue emphasizing our essentially non-European, American identities until we are truly acknowledged as Americans with our own distinctive American presence, Mukherjee’s stance may seem simplistic. Yet, as many of her stories show she is neither ignorant of nor insensitive to racism and oppression in the United States. In the interview with Moyers, she also said that “Multiculturalism, in a sense, is well intentioned, but it ends up marginalizing the person.”

    26. California Magazine
    bharati mukherjee s life story resembles that of a character in fictionher own fiction. Born into a Bengali Brahmin family in Calcutta, she was trained to
    http://www.alumni.berkeley.edu/Alumni/Cal_Monthly/February_2003/QA-_A_conversati
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    January 27, 2008
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    27. Span 34-5 'Diasporas': Bharati Mukherjee With Runar Vignisson
    bharati mukherjee I was born in Calcutta, in the Eastern part of India, in 1940 into a wealthy traditional family. When I was growing up I lived in an
    http://wwwmcc.murdoch.edu.au/ReadingRoom/litserv/SPAN/34/Vignisson.html
    Diasporas Span Reading Room What'sNew ... CRCC SPAN
    Journal of the South Pacific
    Association for Commonwealth
    Literature and Language Studies
    Number 34-35 (1993)
    Diasporas
    Edited by Vijay Mishra
    Bharati Mukherjee: an interview with Runar Vignisson
    Runar Vignisson I was wondering if we could just start by your telling us a little bit about yourself, however you want to start. Bharati Mukherjee I was born in Calcutta, in the Eastern part of India, in 1940 into a wealthy traditional family. When I was growing up I lived in an extended family so that there were 40, 45 people living in the house at the same time. There was absolutely no sense of privacy, every room felt crowded. In fact in the traditional Bengali Hindu family of my kind to want privacy was to be selfish. That was why I was so entranced by the idea of Iceland having little population and lots of space. RV Yes, its very hard, coming from Iceland, to imagine that situation because, you know, there are two people per square kilometre in Iceland. So that's very interesting. BM RV Oh really?

    28. Shop PBS - Shop By Interests: Bill Moyers Shop: Conquering America: Bharati Mukh
    Shop PBS Conquering America bharati mukherjee DVD - where every purchase supports your local PBS station.
    http://www.shoppbs.org/sm-pbs-conquering-america-bharati-mukherjee-dvd--pi-24078
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    29. Jasmine - By Bharati Mukherjee
    The state of exile, a sense of loss, the pain of separation and disorientation makes bharati mukherjee’s novel Jasmine a quest for identity in an alien
    http://www.sawf.org/newedit/edit04302001/bookreview.asp
    Discussions Editorial Forum Music ... Next Issue Monday, April 30 2001 Jasmine - by Bharati Mukherjee
    By- Roopa Malavally Belur Roopa Malavally Belur is a writer, poet and a Carnatac music enthusiast. Roopa is a Technical writer by profession, and takes keen interest in combining writing skills with technology. She volunteers with Women Support groups in the US. Roopa is a mother of a four year old daughter and she takes initiative in volunteering with play groups for children of her daughter's age group. Jasmine - Identity In Exile Jermone Beaty and Paul Hunter in their book, New Worlds of Literature , say Thinking of home is often accompanied by nostalgia the absence or loss of loved ones, the remoteness of the home place we are cut off from our childhood home are Exiles. And the rest of us can perhaps understand, that we are all "exiles" from our past, our childhood, that universal "home" (1) The state of exile, a sense of loss, the pain of separation and disorientation makes Bharati Mukherjee’s novel "Jasmine" a quest for identity in an alien land. Jasmine, the protagonist of the novel, undergoes several transformations during her journey of life in America, from Jyoti to Jasmine to Jane, and often experiences a deep sense of estrangement resulting in a fluid state of identity. This journey becomes a tale of moral courage, a search for self-awareness and self-assertion. Uprooted from her native land India, Jyoti does her best to introduce herself into the new and alien society as an "immigrant"; the culmination finally indicated in Jasmine’s pregnancy with the child of a white man - Bud.

    30. Bharati Mukherjee (b. 1940)
    bharati mukherjee is an enthusiastic and extremely knowledgeable collector of Indian miniatures. Keeping in mind this interest in miniatures,
    http://www9.georgetown.edu/faculty/bassr/heath/syllabuild/iguide/mukher.html
    Bharati Mukherjee (b. 1940)
    Contributing Editor:
    Roshni Rustomji-Kerns
    Classroom Issues and Strategies
    It is important to read and discuss Mukherjee's "A Wife's Story" as an integral part of twentieth-century American literature and not as an "exotic" short story by a foreign writer. As the essay accompanying "A Wife's Story" points out, Mukherjee identifies herself very strongly as an American writer writing about twentieth-century Americans. Although most of her stories are about South Asian-Americans (South Asia in the contemporary geopolitical arena usually consists of Bangladesh, India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, and the Maldive Islands), she sees herself as being primarily influenced by, as well as being part of, the tradition of Euro-American writers. In a brief interview published in the November, 1993 issue of San Francisco Focus in which she discusses her novel, The Holder of the World (published in 1993 after the publication of the second edition of The Heath Anthology ), she says, "I think of myself as an American writer . . . I want to focus on the making of the American mind." But instead of an exploration of the making of the American mind

    31. New York State Writers Institute - Bharati Mukherjee And Clark Blaise
    As different as their backgrounds may be, authors Clark Blaise and bharati Mukherjeewho have been married for 40 yearsview themselves as outsiders in
    http://www.albany.edu/writers-inst/mukherjee_blaise.html
    Bharati Mukherjee January 30, 2001
    (Tuesday)
    8:00 p.m. Joint Reading
    Recital Hall, PAC
    UAlbany's Uptown Campus
    4:00 Informal Seminar, HU 354
    UAlbany's Uptown Campus
    Clark Blaise
    photo credit: Jerry Bauer Clark Blaise and Bharati Mukherjee who have been married for 40 yearsview themselves as "outsiders" in North American society, and share an interest in the experiences of people who don't quite "fit in."
    Clark Blaise is the child of expatriate Canadians (father French-Canadian, mother English-Canadian) who roamed the United States in search of better employment. Blaise has written, "As a native-born American with foreign parents, and as a child who attended an average of two schools a year in 25 different cities, I grew up with an outsider's view of America and a romanticized exile's view of French Canada. . .My interest is in 'tribalism' on the American continent, and in all groups who refuse amalgamation and prefer codes and taboos of their."
    Blaise's rootlessness is linked, in part, to his family's economic distress. Mukherjee's, by contrast, is linked to her family's relative affluence. Born in India, and daughter of a successful businessman, Mukherjee was sent to boarding schools in both Switzerland and Britain, and subsequently attended a school in India run by Irish nuns. Her teachers encouraged her to abandon her Indian heritage in favor of European culture. At age 21, she left India to attend the world-renowned Iowa Writers' Workshop, where she met Blaise, her future husband.

    32. NOW With Bill Moyers. Arts & Culture. Bharati Mukherjee | PBS
    Bibliography and biography of Indian author bharati mukherjee.
    http://www.pbs.org/now/arts/mukherjee.html
    var gaJsHost = (("https:" == document.location.protocol) ? "https://ssl." : "http://www."); document.write(unescape("%3Cscript src='" + gaJsHost + "google-analytics.com/ga.js' type='text/javascript'%3E%3C/script%3E")); Bharati Mukherjee: Her Life and Works More on This Story: Select One Brief Summary of the Air India Trial Mukherjee Interview Transcript Full Archive Previous Page Bharati Mukherjee was born in Calcutta in 1940, the second of three daughters born to Bengali-speaking, Hindu Brahmin parents. She lived in a house crowded with 40 or 50 relatives until she was eight, when her father's career brought the family to live in London for several years. After getting her B.A. from the University of Calcutta in 1959 and her M.A. in English and Ancient Indian Culture from the University of Baroda in 1961, she traveled to the United States for the first time. As she describes it: I flew into a small airport surrounded by cornfields and pastures, ready to carry out the two commands my father had written out for me the night before I left Calcutta: Spend two years studying creative writing at the Iowa Writers' Workshop, then come back home and marry the bridegroom he selected for me from our caste and class. Mukherjee found herself changed by her experience at the University of Iowa, her first coeducational experience. She fell in love with Canadian writer Clark Blaise, a fellow student, and married him impulsively during her lunch break after only two weeks of courtship. Any plans to return to India after finishing school were rewritten in that moment.

    33. IPL Online Literary Criticism Collection
    Our pages on these individual works by bharati mukherjee There are no general critical sites about bharati mukherjee presently in the collection;
    http://www.ipl.org/div/litcrit/bin/litcrit.out.pl?au=muk-292

    34. Bharati Mukherjee Biography
    bharati mukherjee Critical Perspectives edited by Emmanuel S. Nelson, New York, Garland Press, 1993; bharati mukherjee by Fakrul Alam, New York,
    http://biography.jrank.org/pages/4614/Mukherjee-Bharati.html
    Other Free Encyclopedias Brief Biographies Contemporary Novelists Vol 13
    Bharati Mukherjee Biography
    Find all books written by Bharati Mukherjee on Amazon.com Nationality: Canadian. Born: Calcutta, India, 1940; became Canadian citizen, 1972. Education: Loreto Convent School, Calcutta; University of Calcutta, B.A. (honors) in English 1959; University of Baroda, Gujarat, M.A. 1961; University of Iowa, Iowa City, M.F.A. 1963; Ph.D. 1969. Career: Awards: Canada Arts Council grant, 1973, 1977; Guggenheim fellowship, 1977; National Book Critics Circle award, 1989; Pushcart prize, 1999. Agent: Timothy Seldes, Russell and Volkening, 551 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York 10017, U.S.A.
    P UBLICATIONS
    Novels
    Boston, Houghton Mifflin, 1972; London, Chatto and Windus, 1973. Wife. Boston, Houghton Mifflin, 1975; London, Penguin, 1987. Jasmine. New York, Grove Weidenfeld, 1989; London, Virago Press, 1990. The Holder of the World. New York, Knopf, and Chatto and Windus, 1993. Leave It to Me. New York, Knopf, 1997.
    Short Stories
    Darkness.

    35. Bharati Mukherjee — Infoplease.com
    July 27 Birthdays Alexandre Dumas July 27 birthdays Alexandre Dumas, Norman Lear, Peggy Fleming, bharati mukherjee, Leo Durocher
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      Biography
      Bharati Mukherjee writer Born: Birthplace: Calcutta, India Mukherjee was born to Indian parents and had learned to read and write by age 3. She earned a B.A from the University of Calcutta in 1959 and her M.A. in English and ancient Indian culture from the University of Baroda in 1961, then moved to the United States to attend the Iowa Writers' Workshop. From the University of Iowa she earned her M.F.A. in creative writing in 1963 and Ph.D. in English and comparative literature in 1969. She has also lived in England and Canada. Mukherjee's eloquent novels treat the subjects of assimilation, family, and the struggles of Indian women. Her first book, The Tiger's Daughter (1972), concerns a young woman who returns to India after many years, only to discover the nation's chaos and mistreatment of women. She has written more than a dozen books of fiction and nonfiction, including the acclaimed collection

    36. Bharati Mukherjee - Research And Read Books, Journals, Articles At
    Research bharati mukherjee at the Questia.com online library.
    http://www.questia.com/library/literature/bharati-mukherjee.jsp

    37. Bharati Mukherjee
    mukherjee s earlier works, such as the The Tiger s Daughter and parts of Days and Nights in Calcutta, are her attempts to find her identity in her Indian
    http://contemporarylit.about.com/cs/authors/p/mukherjee.htm
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    FREE Newsletter. Sign Up Now! Wikipedia on Bharati Mukherjee:
    Born in Calcutta, India into a wealthy family, Mukherjee was given the chance to receive a university education at home, which she continued in the United States and in Canada. It was there that she met Canadian writer Clark Blaise. The couple have been married since 1963, and they have two sons. Mukherjee's stories revolve around the culture clash experienced by Indians who have emigrated to North America but still have difficulty acculturating. For example, in "A Father" (from her 1985 collection Darkness), a religious Hindu's hopes for a harmonious family life are shattered when he learns that his grown-up but still single daughter has had artificial insemination because she wants a baby but rejects men. In "The Lady from Lucknow" (in the same volume), the bored wife of an Indian academic adapts to the American way of life by committing adultery with an unexciting middle-aged WASP.

    38. ArtandCulture Artist: Bharati Mukherjee
    Violent and timely, contemporary and historical, true and fantastical, bharati mukherjee s work has been a windstorm sweeping up the major flavor of her
    http://www.artandculture.com/cgi-bin/WebObjects/ACLive.woa/wa/artist?id=1056

    39. Chowk: : Bharati Mukherjee : The American Dreamer
    The experience of cutting myself off from a biological homeland and settling in an adopted homeland that is not always welcoming to its darkcomplexioned
    http://www.chowk.com/articles/8572
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    Bharati Mukherjee : The American Dreamer
    Zeynab Ali January 11, 2005
    Tags: writer indian woman desi ...
    identity
    was fixed, derived from religion family Literature from the Iowa University.
    love
    India
    identity
    of my own; my identity marriage marriage , she and her husband moved to Canada, where Mukherjee became one of the youngest tenured women racism
    Her struggle with identity first as an exile from India literature loss , the loss of communal values Language environment ...
    South Asia
    . My affiliation with readers should be on the basis of what they want to read, not in terms of my ethnicity
    citizens

    This article was published earlier in The Friday Times on Dec 31, 2004. Times viewed:12669 interact read comments Share and save this article:
    Also by Zeynab Ali
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    40. SSRN-Subversive Implosion In Bharati Mukherjee's Fiction: A Theoretical Reading
    SSRNSubversive Implosion in bharati mukherjee s Fiction A Theoretical Reading by Rajasekhar Patteti.
    http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=959346

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