In her Translator’s Note for Volume I of this series, Pritham K Chakravarthy wrote that the work, which was also the first publication by the Chennai-based Blaft, was ‘an attempt to claim the status of “literature” for a huge body of writing that has rarely ever made it into an academic library.’ These works of popular fiction, she explained, were typically not considered ‘serious’ or ‘meaningful’ enough to be translated. Her colleague and co-founder of Blaft, Rakesh Khanna, who started the publishing house in 2007, adds that the idea behind Blaft was to ‘capture different voices’. For instance, Charu Nivedita, a Tamil writer who wrote overtly sexual prose, was one among many writers whom Blaft began to translate and publish.
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The Blaft Anthology of Tamil Pulp
Fiction, Vol II
edited by Rakesh Khanna
translated by Pritham K Chakravarthy
Blaft, 2010
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A cicada at the door 21 May 2012
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Fiction
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By Deepa Bhasthi |
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A new lens 18 May 2012
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Satish Sharma describes a new visual language for the streets of Southasia....
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Drawing conclusions 17 May 2012
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The row over a cartoon featuring Dalit leader Ambedkar shows a lack of critical...
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By Rohini Hensman |
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The fighting Kachin 15 May 2012
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Burma’s recent reforms have brought no respite for the Kachin people.
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By Brennan O’Connor |
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Clearing Korail 11 May 2012
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Dhaka’s latest slum demolition shows the full scale of the Bangladeshi government’s...
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By Saad Hammadi |
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High Himalayan hype 11 May 2012
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Infatuation with Everest has inspired Everest-sized absurdities.
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By Don Messerschmidt |
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Why separate? 10 May 2012
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A new book justifies Kashmiri secession, but the scholarly appraisal ignores...
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By Rakesh Ankit |
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Where are our promised soft borders? |












