Fantasy and the Politics of Subversion: Speculative Writing in Colonial India
By (Author) Dr Mayurika Chakravorty
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
11th December 2025
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Literary studies: postcolonial literature
Literary studies: fiction, novelists and prose writers
Fantasy
Hardback
272
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
Focusing on the corpus of Fantasy texts written in colonial India during the late 19th and early 20th century, this book explores the origins, motivations, nature and role of speculative writing around the period of the Indian independence movement. Taking stock of Bengali texts previously designated as childrens literature, Mayurika Chakravorty examines the works of such authors as Sanjibchandra Chattopadhyay, Trailokyanath Mukhopadhyay, Sukumar Ray and Parashuram (Rajshekhar Basu) and Sukumar Ray to shed light on how their writing offered stringent commentaries on the colonial situation whilst grappling with larger questions surrounding science, progress, the environment, ethics and morality. With a focus on how key works previously omitted from the established canon of fantasy literature were based on diverse classical streams from European, Persian, classical Sanskrit and local folk traditions, the book explores how speculative writers challenged the dominant literary tropes of both colonial (Western) and revivalist (Sanskrit) classicism. In highlighting overlooked writing within Indian literary history and fantasy and childrens literature studies, Chakravorty demonstrates that in understanding these works in relation to one another, they provide evidence of compelling bodies of work produced in the context of, and in resistance to, empire.
Mayurika Chakravorty is Assistant Professor in the Department of English and the Institute of Interdisciplinary Studies (Childhood and Youth Studies program), Carleton University, Ottawa, Canada. She was a Felix doctoral scholar and holds a Ph.D. from the School of Oriental and African Studies, London, UK. She was a visiting scholar at the Centre for Research in Children's Literature at Cambridge for the Easter Term, 2024. She researches and writes on fantasy and speculative literature; childrens literature; and the representation of childhood and girlhood in literature and media.