Sri Lankan Anglophone Literature as a Mode for Dialogue and Reconciliation in the Portrayal of War in Sri Lanka (1983-2009)
S. Bamunusinghe, and C. D. Senaratne
References
Brosman, C. S. (1992). The Functions of War Literature, South Central Review, 9(1), 85-98.
Calloway, C. (2018). War in Literature and Drama. Retrieved 24th May 2021 from https://www.oxfordbibliographies.com
Denicius, C. A. and Sivapalan, C. C. A. (2014). Relocating Literature: Rereading “The Waste Land” from a Sri-Lankan Post-war Perspective. Jaffna University International Research Conference (JUICE-2012), 148-154.
Devotta, N. (2005). From ethnic outbidding to ethnic conflict: The institutional bases for Sri Lanka’s separatist war. Nations and Nationalism, 11(1), 141-159.
DeVotta, N. (2000). Control democracy, institutional decay, and the quest for Eelam: Explaining Ethnic conflict in Sri Lanka, Pacific Affairs, 73(1), 55-76.
Dutta, K. (2020). Writing the Home Writing the Nation: A Reading of Shyam Selvadurai’s Funny Boy. International Journal of Innovative Research in Science, Engineering and Technology (IJIRSET), 9(11), 10681-10685.
Goonetilleke, D. C. R. A. (1992). Sri Lanka’s “Ethnic” Conflict in Its Literature in English. World Literature Today, 66(3), 450-453.
Jayasuriya, M. (2012). Terror and Reconciliation - Sri Lankan Anglophone Literature 1983-2009. Lexington Books.
General Information
Executive Editor:Prof. Donald L.Horowitz Prof. Upali Pannilage Prof. R Seneviratne
Prof. SLJ Fernando
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