Welcome to Guest !
 
       IUP Publications
              (Since 1994)
Home About IUP Journals Books Archives Publication Ethics
     
  Subscriber Services   |   Feedback   |   Subscription Form
 
 
Login:
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - -
-
   
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
 

The IUP Journal of English Studies 


March '12
Focus

Increasingly the plight of large chunks of marginalized segments of humanity is being highlighted by a variety of agencies and even individuals. Although self-centered politicians champion their cause potently to capture the vote bank,

Articles
   
Price
(INR)
Buy
The Mystical Aura in Rilke’s Duino Elegies and Alfred Tennyson’s
In Memoriam: A Comparison
Realism in Gustave Flaubert’s Madame Bovary
In the Hermeneutic Code: Unsolved Enigmas in the Plays of Tennessee Williams
Segregation: An Abomination
Thematic Concerns in Nayantara Sahgal’s Rich Like Us
Images of Women Presented by Diasporic Writers:
A Study of Chitra Banerjee’s Arranged Marriage
Autobiographical Element in Haroun and the Sea of Stories
Maintenance of Lower-Frequency Vocabulary: A Forgotten Issue?
Ecocriticism in Eastern and Western Traditions
Select/Remove All    

The Mystical Aura in Rilke’s Duino Elegies and Alfred Tennyson’s In Memoriam: A Comparison

-- Bibhudutt Dash

This essay makes a critical, comparative study of the mystical elements in the German poet Rainer Maria Rilke’s (1923) Duino Elegies and Alfred Tennyson’s (1850) In Memoriam, two great elegies in world literature. While juxtaposing the mystical notes in the works, it highlights how the ‘mystique’ content contributes to the grand design and the overall effect of the poems. The rationale behind the selection of the texts lies in finding a good deal of similarities between the two, of which the mystical element is an important one.

Article Price : Rs.50

Realism in Gustave Flaubert’s Madame Bovary

-- Ritu R Agarwal

An attempt has been made in this paper to justify that Flaubert, way back in the mid-nineteenth century, had used new realism as identified by Raymond Williams, and Madame Bovary is an illustration of a contemporary novel in which description is used as an element of action, new technique has been used to describe new kind of reality, and ‘apprehended psychological state’ has been portrayed which is a modern feature. It is neither a social nor a personal novel but a novel in which there is a ‘reconciliation of the individual and society’ and it also reflects ‘the struggle for relationships.’ Madame Bovary, an 1857 novel, is about a doctor’s wife, Emma Bovary, who has adulterous affairs and lives beyond her means in order to escape the emptiness of provincial life. It is a novel which is contemporary in content and form and realistic in intent. Gustave Flaubert adopted a new narrative technique which Williams has focused on in his essay. Flaubert ‘shows’ rather than ‘tells’. The use of symbols, contrast and irony has lent an innovativeness to the novel. Madame Bovary is not a novel of a woman and a town. On the larger scale, it is a novel of a generation and a society. Flaubert’s Madame Bovary is a reflection of Raymond Williams’ views wherein he believes that “the way of life is neither aggregation nor unit, but a whole indivisible process.” and that “a new realism is necessary to remain creative.”

Article Price : Rs.50

In the Hermeneutic Code: Unsolved Enigmas in the Plays of Tennessee Williams

-- Ramnarayan Panda

Certain studies of literature developed along the line of discourse analyses in relation to other genres such as poetry and fiction can be suitably adopted in study of dramatic literature. The famous S/Z, an exemplary study in intertextuality by the noted French structuralist turned post-structuralist Roland Barthes, denotes such viability. In S/Z, Barthes splits Balzac’s text Sarrasine into several ‘lexias’ or units of reading and examines the role played by the different codes in each ‘lexia’. This paper takes up the method of reading adopted by Barthes in relation to the hermeneutic code, one of the five codes discovered by Barthes, and applies it to selected plays of Williams Tennessee with a view to highlighting the ‘readerly’ as well as ‘writerly’ dimension of Williams’ drama. Even though Barthes has clearly noted that the hermeneutic code is one of irreversible codes, accounting mostly for solved enigmas in literary works, it turns out to be a handy tool to single out ‘writerly’ elements as well. The paper first explains the relevant theoretical notions, and later examines the plays of Williams.

Article Price : Rs.50

Segregation: An Abomination

-- P Sakthi and Stella Thangaraj

This article discusses the theme of segregation, which was derived from the incorporation of institutionalized racism and existed among the Afro-Americans in the early nineteenth century. The hostile and negative feelings of the White racists towards the Blacks, who were treated ‘inferior,’ are focused on the oppressions and dehumanization experienced by the ‘colored people’ are explored in the light of Claude McKay’s and Gwendolyn Brooks’ poems. As Black creative writers, they view this iniquity as an abomination. They raised their voice for their discriminated race and created ‘Black Consciousness’ among them. And their poems taught them to raise their banner of victory from the dust.

Article Price : Rs.50

Thematic Concerns in Nayantara Sahgal’s Rich Like Us

--G Gulam Tariq, M Zafarullah Baig and Syeda Ifrana

The main focus in the novels of Nayantara Sahgal, the celebrated Indian English novelist, is on the plight and problems of educated women, mostly with an urban base. She speaks about the predicament of new Indian woman. In this paper, an attempt has been made to explore the theme of sufferings in post-independence era and maladjustment of an English lady in the Indian social setup. Sahgal also depicts how women grow in strength in spite of many hurdles and how women make many sacrifices and compromises, and how they boldly face the challenges of life with forbearance.

Article Price : Rs.50

Images of Women Presented by Diasporic Writers: A Study of Chitra Banerjee’s Arranged Marriage

-- Hetal M Doshi

With the rise of women diasporic writers, the images of immigrated women have often been discussed in literature. It has been debated that feminism is now an outdated issue and the women have successfully achieved equality and defied patriarchal norms. More so, Indian women writers in foreign land are equipped with better themes than the perennially penned subjects like rights of women, injustice, gender inequality and so on. This paper discusses the images of women in the work of diasporic female writer Chitra Banerjee and tries to find out whether the immigrated status brings any change in the fate, attitude and life of women.

Article Price : Rs.50

Autobiographical Element in Haroun and the Sea of Stories

-- Indira Reddy

As we read Rushdie’s Haroun and the Sea of Stories, we recall Grimus, Rushdie’s first novel. Like Grimus, this moral and aesthetic parable oscillates between fantasy and reality and impresses us with the skilful weaving of the real and unreal, dream and reality. Rushdie’s explicit ideas, exuberant language and gumption are expressed powerfully in all his works. Haroun and the Sea of Stories is a cogent narrative enlivened by complex imagery where the characters are scrutinized in detail and artistically presented to us. Since Haroun and Sea of Stories is Rushdie’s first novel written, while he was hiding, the first after the fatwa experience, the autobiographical element in the novel cannot be overlooked. The story starts with a very common theme of a tale of a father and son and starts spinning its magic by adding varied characters, and the dramatic juggling takes off, adding complex developments, climaxing into a poignantly incredible journey. Rushdie was forced into exile and expatriation. His freedom of expression was severely curtailed. At this desperate and gloomy time, Haroun and Sea of Stories was written as a reaction to the menace of censorship of fatwa issued by Ayotollah Khomeini.

Article Price : Rs.50

Maintenance of Lower-Frequency Vocabulary: A Forgotten Issue?

-- Karina Vidal

Teaching Foreign Language (FL)vocabulary is normally reduced to introducing words before or after tasks or to explaining the items included in course books units. In the case of lower-frequency words, much more attention and work is needed for long-term retention to take place. Findings in the field of cognitive science provide guidelines for effective learning practices. However, most of these findings have had little impact on education. The aim of this article is to raise awareness of the importance of promoting conditions that nurture the items in the vocabulary component the teacher has decided to explicitly teach and those which students set out to learn on their own. Unfortunately, lack of vocabulary development hinders the students’ proficiency development. This paper, then, reviews findings in the field of language loss and maintenance and suggests effective practices for the consolidation of less frequent words. It also provides guidelines regarding self-study activities.

Article Price : Rs.50

Ecocriticism in Eastern and Western Traditions

-- Raj Kumar Mishra

Ecocriticism is a consciousness-raising phenomenon about environment. To the students or scholars of literature, Ecocriticism is a critical development to spread consciousness about ecological concerns. It is a multidisciplinary approach. Numberless development programs are being executed not for improving ecology, but instead at the cost of ecology. Ecocriticism as a literary ecological philosophy provides a reliable framework or mechanism to analyze cultural and literary texts which are directly/indirectly preoccupied with ecological concerns and contexts. Moreover, it looks at the depictions of natural sights and landscapes along with people’s attitudes and attention towards nature, may be favorable or unfavorable. In fact, this sort of attempt negotiates between literature and ecology. This paper attempts to trace the prevalence of ecological concerns in the works of writers like Kalidasa and Valmiki as well.

Article Price : Rs.50

 

Search
 

  www
  IUP

Search
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
 
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
 
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Click here to upload your Article

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Automated Teller Machines (ATMs): The Changing Face of Banking in India

Bank Management
Information and communication technology has changed the way in which banks provide services to its customers. These days the customers are able to perform their routine banking transactions without even entering the bank premises. ATM is one such development in recent years, which provides remote banking services all over the world, including India. This paper analyzes the development of this self-service banking in India based on the secondary data.

The Information and Communication Technology (ICT) is playing a very important role in the progress and advancement in almost all walks of life. The deregulated environment has provided an opportunity to restructure the means and methods of delivery of services in many areas, including the banking sector. The ICT has been a focused issue in the past two decades in Indian banking. In fact, ICTs are enabling the banks to change the way in which they are functioning. Improved customer service has become very important for the very survival and growth of banking sector in the reforms era. The technological advancements, deregulations, and intense competition due to the entry of private sector and foreign banks have altered the face of banking from one of mere intermediation to one of provider of quick, efficient and customer-friendly services. With the introduction and adoption of ICT in the banking sector, the customers are fast moving away from the traditional branch banking system to the convenient and comfort of virtual banking. The most important virtual banking services are phone banking, mobile banking, Internet banking and ATM banking. These electronic channels have enhanced the delivery of banking services accurately and efficiently to the customers. The ATMs are an important part of a bank’s alternative channel to reach the customers, to showcase products and services and to create brand awareness. This is reflected in the increase in the number of ATMs all over the world. ATM is one of the most widely used remote banking services all over the world, including India. This paper analyzes the growth of ATMs of different bank groups in India.
International Scenario

If ATMs are largely available over geographically dispersed areas, the benefit from using an ATM will increase as customers will be able to access their bank accounts from any geographic location. This would imply that the value of an ATM network increases with the number of available ATM locations, and the value of a bank network to a customer will be determined in part by the final network size of the banking system. The statistical information on the growth of branches and ATM network in select countries.

Indian Scenario

The financial services industry in India has witnessed a phenomenal growth, diversification and specialization since the initiation of financial sector reforms in 1991. Greater customer orientation is the only way to retain customer loyalty and withstand competition in the liberalized world. In a market-driven strategy of development, customer preference is of paramount importance in any economy. Gone are the days when customers used to come to the doorsteps of banks. Now the banks are required to chase the customers; only those banks which are customercentric and extremely focused on the needs of their clients can succeed in their business today.

more...

 
View Previous Issues
English Studies