Volume - 13 | Issue-1
Volume - 13 | Issue-1
Volume - 13 | Issue-1
Volume - 13 | Issue-1
Volume - 13 | Issue-1
The present paper is an attempt to explore the works of regional poets through a postcolonial lens with an aim to analyze the experienced subjectivities in historicized narratives. This study will evaluate the socio-political and cultural condition of these authors and their people, if and whether globalization and modernism have produced hybridized or alienated identities, what these marginalized voices suppressed by hegemonic dominations speak or write of, and how significant their works are in the present context. Three particular authors belonging to different states have been selected within the purview of this study: Temsula Ao, Robin Ngangom, and Bhaskaranand Jha Bhaskar. This paper seeks to analyze, contextualize and interpret how the selected poets of the region have responded poetically to the widely prevalent perceptions about the colonized ensued by discursive historiography through poetic resistance, production of indigenous narratives, and chronicling of voices from the periphery.