Daniel_S_Burt_The_Drama_100__A_Ranking.pdf
3 MB
The Drama 100 - A Ranking of the Greatest Plays of All Time
Join — @EnglishNETJRF
Join — @EnglishNETJRF
Congratualtions to all who made it this time and all the best to the people couldn't for their next attempt. 👍 😃
If there's anyone who cleared in the channel and wants to share their result, experience, tips and tricks, books, study material etc. can send them @gaarlicbread and I'll share them here.
Hi, sharing with you my experience in a series of audios. This particular one deals with the books that I think are important for NET. You will see a screenshot of my result (for the curious lot) followed by an audio in my screechy voice.
If there are others, as I have said before, who have cleared - you can share your experience too and I will post it here. It's all in good faith. Cheers!
If there are others, as I have said before, who have cleared - you can share your experience too and I will post it here. It's all in good faith. Cheers!
TL;DL?
- I recommend R.D Trivedi for History along with sprinkled readings of William Henry Hudson and William J Long for British History.
- M.A.R Habib’s book for Literary Theory. (PDF would suffice)
- Dictionary of Literary Terms by - J.A. Cuddon published by Penguin. (M.H. Abrahams will work too)
- English for UGC/NET/JRF/SLET by R.S. Malik for a question bank to practice.
- Previous Years Question Papers (Obviously)
- I recommend R.D Trivedi for History along with sprinkled readings of William Henry Hudson and William J Long for British History.
- M.A.R Habib’s book for Literary Theory. (PDF would suffice)
- Dictionary of Literary Terms by - J.A. Cuddon published by Penguin. (M.H. Abrahams will work too)
- English for UGC/NET/JRF/SLET by R.S. Malik for a question bank to practice.
- Previous Years Question Papers (Obviously)
Here's the link to the audiobook of William J. Long.
https://librivox.org/english-literature-by-william-j-long/
https://librivox.org/english-literature-by-william-j-long/
A_Dictionary_of_Literary_Terms_and.pdf
6.2 MB
Dictionary of Literary Terms - Penguin (Recommended but in hard copy)
Ronald_Carter_The_Routledge_History.pdf
2.6 MB
The Routledge History of English Literature - Ronald Carter
*Nuruddin Farah*, (born 1945, Baidoa, Italian Somaliland [now in Somalia]), Somali writer whose rich imagination and refreshing and often fortuitous use of his adopted language made him the most significant Somali writer in any European language.
The son of a merchant and the well-known Somali poet Aleeli Faduma, Farah was educated in Ethiopia and at the colonial-era Institutio Magistrale in Mogadishu. Although his primary languages were Somali, Amharic, and Arabic, he also learned English and some Italian. His decision to write in English, chiefly a matter of the typewriter available to him, eventually gave him an international audience. After working for the Ministry of Education, he studied literature and philosophy at Panjab University in Chandigarh, India. There he wrote his first full-fledged novel, From a Crooked Rib(1970). It portrayed the determination of one woman to maintain her dignity in a society that believes “God created Woman from a crooked rib; and anyone who trieth to straighten it, breaketh it”; it was the first of Farah’s feminist works.
In his next novel, A Naked Needle(1976), Farah used a slight tale of interracial and cross-cultural love to reveal a lurid picture of postrevolutionary Somali life in the mid-1970s. He next wrote a trilogy—Sweet and Sour Milk (1979), Sardines(1981), and Close Sesame (1983)—about life under a particularly African dictatorship, in which ideological slogans barely disguise an almost surreal society and human ties have been severed by dread and terror.
This unblinking portrayal of life under the dictator Maxamed Siyaad Barre(Muhammad Siad Barre) eventually forced Farah into exile. He taught for a time in Europe, North America, and elsewhere in Africa, writing in 1998: “My novels are about states of exile; about women shivering in the cruel cold in a world ruled by men; about the commoner denied justice; about a torturer tortured by guilt, his own conscience; about a traitor betrayed.” *Secrets*, the third novel of his second trilogy—which includes the novels *Maps (1986)* and *Gifts (1992)*—was published in 1998.
The son of a merchant and the well-known Somali poet Aleeli Faduma, Farah was educated in Ethiopia and at the colonial-era Institutio Magistrale in Mogadishu. Although his primary languages were Somali, Amharic, and Arabic, he also learned English and some Italian. His decision to write in English, chiefly a matter of the typewriter available to him, eventually gave him an international audience. After working for the Ministry of Education, he studied literature and philosophy at Panjab University in Chandigarh, India. There he wrote his first full-fledged novel, From a Crooked Rib(1970). It portrayed the determination of one woman to maintain her dignity in a society that believes “God created Woman from a crooked rib; and anyone who trieth to straighten it, breaketh it”; it was the first of Farah’s feminist works.
In his next novel, A Naked Needle(1976), Farah used a slight tale of interracial and cross-cultural love to reveal a lurid picture of postrevolutionary Somali life in the mid-1970s. He next wrote a trilogy—Sweet and Sour Milk (1979), Sardines(1981), and Close Sesame (1983)—about life under a particularly African dictatorship, in which ideological slogans barely disguise an almost surreal society and human ties have been severed by dread and terror.
This unblinking portrayal of life under the dictator Maxamed Siyaad Barre(Muhammad Siad Barre) eventually forced Farah into exile. He taught for a time in Europe, North America, and elsewhere in Africa, writing in 1998: “My novels are about states of exile; about women shivering in the cruel cold in a world ruled by men; about the commoner denied justice; about a torturer tortured by guilt, his own conscience; about a traitor betrayed.” *Secrets*, the third novel of his second trilogy—which includes the novels *Maps (1986)* and *Gifts (1992)*—was published in 1998.
Criticism.pdf
6.9 MB
M.A.R Habib - Modern Literary Criticism and Theory
@EnglishNETJRF
@EnglishNETJRF
Critical-Theory-Today_A_User_Friendly_Guide.pdf
6.6 MB
Lois Tyson - Critical Theory Today - A User Friendly Guide
@EnglishNETJRF
@EnglishNETJRF
This channel is very good as far as Paper 1 is concerned. Please keep an eye on their videos concerning NET.
UGC (CBSE) NET JRF Exam - Paper I
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLW9kB_HKs3_NCXcqf9tBCUh5uYD1aBg6W
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLW9kB_HKs3_NCXcqf9tBCUh5uYD1aBg6W
YouTube
NTA UGC NET JRF Exam - Paper 1 (UGC)
For MCQs and mock papers with detailed solutions visit http://www.doorsteptutor.com/Exams/UGC/Paper-1. The complete study material for NTA NET Updated 2019 i...