{"product_id":"nanya-hindi-edition","title":"Nanya (Hindi Edition)","description":"\u003cp\u003ePrabhu Joshi is a unique storyteller in the Hindi fiction world, weaving the riches of thought and sensibility from the mere threads of subtle sensations, wherein the architecture of creation encompasses the geography of time. This is why nearly all of his long and novelistic narratives have centered their themes on the profound sorrows of the contradictions of a hierarchical society. The present work, Nanya, takes as its object the painful map of the mind of an innocent child in a small village in a colonial-era, underdeveloped region. Despite the inadequacy of language, it creates such a natural idiom of expression that, in the urban form of the language, all the Tadbhav words agree to express their meanings with the same uniqueness that has been a distinctive feature of the vernacular. Needless to say, Prabhu Joshi was undoubtedly the first Hindi prose writer to introduce readers to the linguistic riches of the Malwa region. Through his village tales, readers in the early 1970s grasped the reality of this region in all its complexity, a fact that had eluded their predecessors from this region. In this time of innocence, this tragic tale of Nanya is portrayed with such a masterful art. Prabhu Joshis skillful prose writer infuses the narrative coherence, layer by layer, with such intensity that the narrative beauty and curiosity remain undisturbed throughout the work. It goes without saying that this is the first work of Hindi fiction in which such a vast inner narrative has been created in the possible idiom of a child protagonists thinking language. His hopes and despair, joys and sorrows, are captured in a narrative with a perfect variability of emotions, where the shelter of folk memory makes the characters childlike innocence even more authentic. This story is set at a time when the duality of town and village wasnt so stark, and people feared being rootless by migrating from the countryside. At one point in the story, the grandmothers statement, in a logical manner, expresses this social truth, rooted in the truth: When there is water in the well, pride in the mansion, a cow in the barn, and prosperity in the hands, why should we leave the village and go to Sergam? However, Nanya, grappling with the questioning of her mental structure between her grandmother and her elder Ba, becomes increasingly entangled in the strange and tangled knots of beliefs, reminding us of the tragedies of the child characters of Rudyard Kipling, Chekhov, and Dostoevsky, and brings us closer to the circle of universality of compassion and empathy. Prabhu Joshis skill as a storyteller also lies in the fact that the presence of the narrator is artfully camouflaged. Nanyas story, taking the form of a self-dialogue within her own solitude, becomes so transparent that the reader is left helpless, surrounded by an innocent tragedy, surrounded by anguish. Despite being time-locked, the story leaves us with many poignant questions, like a universal truth. The fact that the work, by leaping across such a vast time gap, competes with contemporary literature, testifies to its uniqueness.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"RajKamal Prakashan","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":45873365778630,"sku":"DADAX9387462358","price":6.61,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0695\/9389\/1014\/files\/71CvtBsyPyL.jpg?v=1779541752","url":"https:\/\/ergodemedia.com\/products\/nanya-hindi-edition","provider":"Ergodemedia","version":"1.0","type":"link"}