Verrier elwin autobiography of a fleas lady
The Tribal World of Verrier Elwin
autobiography by Verrier Elwin
The Tribal World of Verrier Elwin is an autobiography of anthropologistVerrier Elwin published by Oxford University Press.
Verrier elwin autobiography of a fleas man Addeddate Collection_added JaiGyan Identifier the-tribal-world-of-verrier-elwin Identifier-ark ark://s2k9f55jtxr.The book was published posthumously in May , three months after the death of Elwin. It was awarded the Sahitya Akademi Award in [2][3]
Publication
Jonathan Cape and Hutchinson were interested in publishing Elwin's autobiography and had sent letters to Elwin but he decided to approach Oxford University Press.
For book's title, Elwin requested his publisher R. E. Hawkins of Oxford University Press for suggestions and Hawkins put forward twenty-five different alternatives including Pilgrim's Way to NEFA,From Merton to Nongthymai, Khadi, Cassock, and Gown, Into the Forests, Over the Hills, Anthropologist at Large, Philanthropologist, No Tribal Myth, and My Passage to Tribal India.
But they finalized the title The Tribal World of Verrier Elwin, "to make evident [Elwin's] primary loyalty and identification".
Verrier elwin autobiography of a fleas tribal world of verrier elwin - autobiography, , oxford university press, verrier elwin addeddate identifier.The book was sent to press for the publication on 9 August When Elwin asked Hawkins for comments, Hawkins mentioned that the book does not reveal much about Elwin's personal life like "the struggle with Christianity, the rejection of civilization, the marriage to a tribal life, the final adoption of Indian citizenship." He wrote to Elwin that the Western readers "would like to know far more than you tell him here about the reasons which led you to take these steps, and the mental anguish that must have accompanied many of them".
However, Elwin died on 22 February at the age of 61, before his autobiography could be published.[7] The book was published posthumously in May
Awards
The autobiography was awarded the Sahitya Akademi Award in [3] The citation for the award mentioned that the book is written "with sincerity, courage and charm, revealing a mind in which Western and Indian idealism were uniquely blended" and called it an "outstanding contribution to contemporary Indian writing in English".
Reception and review
Indian historian and writer Ramachandra Guha mentioned that after reading two of Elwin's books, The Tribal World of Verrier Elwin and Leaves from the Jungle: Life in a Gond Village, inspired him to do Ph.D.
in sociology. Poet and critic Nissim Ezekiel noted that the autobiography is written with "great charm and persuasion" and further mentioned that "[Elwin's] final position on all matters is made absolutely clear. There is not a single ambiguous sentence in [the book] and yet [no] dogmatic pronouncement in it". Kirkus Reviews mentions that "the descriptions of the Indian tribes are interesting enough, but the dose of home-spun personal philosophy is rather heavy".[10] It was also noted that Elwin's personal life is not much discussed in the book and there are larger gaps in the narrative.[11][12]