S. No. |
Title
|
Audhor(s) |
Page No. |
1.
|
Contemporaneity of Cosmopolitanism
|
Sachidananda Mohanty |
1-7
|
2.
|
The Writer and the Panoptic Surveillance in Annie Zaidi’s Untitled 1
|
Seema Malik |
8-17
|
3.
|
Decoding Gender and Negotiating Culture: Re-configuration and Representation in C.S. Lakshmi's Selected Short Fiction
|
Gunja Patni &RimikaSinghvi |
18-24
|
4.
|
Linguistic Tropes in Amitav Ghosh's Ibis Trilogy
|
Khan Sheehan Shahab & Shruti Rawal |
25-33
|
5.
|
Women’s Voices in the Folk Songs of Rajasthan
|
Santosh Kanwar Shekhawat |
34-45
|
6.
|
Production of Studio Kiln Props
|
Uzzi, Festus Osarumwense |
46-60
|
7.
|
Factual History Fictionalized: A Case Study of Subjectivities Employed in Salman Rushdie’s Midnight’s Children
|
Aditee Sharma |
61-66
|
8.
|
Witnessing the Iraq Invasion: A Reading of the Rhetoric of Anger and the Form of the Blog in Riverbend’s Baghdad Burning.
|
Adrita Mukherjee |
67-76
|
9.
|
Absent Presence of Fathers in the Selected Works of TennesseWilliams and Anne Tyler
|
Neha Motwani |
77-84
|
10.
|
Women in Greek and Indian Mythology in the Selected Works of DevduttPattanaik
|
Charitra HG & Sanjana G |
85-92
|
11.
|
The Curious Case of Indian Comics: The ‘Birth’ of Comics in India
|
Rita Sarkar |
93-105
|
12.
|
Transnational Cultures and Fractured Female Identities: A Study of Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni’s Arranged Marriage
|
Shiva Sharma & Lalit Kishor Sharma |
106-112
|
13.
|
Reflection of the Indian Ethos in Ruskin Bond’s Selected Writings
|
Shweta Sharma |
113-122
|
14.
|
The Visual Vocabulary of India : Design Practice since the Indus Valley Civilization
|
Kashyap Parikh |
123-130
|
15.
|
The Representational Politics of Autism in Salman Rushdie’s Shame
|
Anju Sosan George |
131-138
|
16.
|
|
उष्मा यादव |
139-145
|
17.
|
Language, Identity and Conflict : The Colonizer /Colonized Dichotomy in the Writings of Assia Djebar
|
RounakMahtab |
146-149
|
18.
|
Utilitarianism and the Education System in Charles Dickens’s Hard Times
|
AnshuGagal |
150-159
|
19.
|
For the Sake of Name and Identity : Reading Jhumpa Lahiri’sThe Namesake
|
Pawanpreet Kaur |
160-166
|
20.
|
Love and Marriage in Shakespeare’s The Winter’s Tale, Cymbeline, and The Tempest
|
Kripashankar Verma |
167-176
|
21.
|
Buying Behaviour of National and International Students towardsApparel and Accessories
|
Anu H. Gupta, Navneet Sekhkon & Jasleen Kaur
|
177-187
|
22.
|
Digital Practices in Public Relations
|
Jolly Jain |
188-195
|
23.
|
Ecocritical Approach and Elements in Amitav Ghosh’s The Hungry Tide
|
V.V. Haleshappa |
196-198
|
24.
|
The Intersection of Geography and Dialect: A Study of the Wagadi Dialect of Southern Rajasthan
|
Khushpal Garg |
199-206
|
25.
|
Book Review
|
Mandeep Kaur |
207-208
|
26.
|
The Scalpel and the Pen: An Interview with Dr. Kavery Nambisan
|
Jenniffer L. |
209-211
|