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  1. Only showing results from www.jstor.org

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  2. Sri Lankan Drama in English: Metamorphosis Through Migration Ceylon, from whatever direction it is approached, unfolds a scene of loveliness and grandeur unsurpassed, if it be ri-valled, by any land in the universe. Sir James Emerson Tennent, Ceylon (1859) By D. C. R. A. GOONETILLEKE Sri Lanka - or Ceylon, as it was known till 1972 -
  3. subsequent works, Acid Bomb Explosion (1978) and its revised and expanded version An Asian Gambit (1985). The impact of the in surgency sharpens further the writers' awareness of social issues. Initially, Acid Bomb Explosion was not published as a novel but was serialized in the weekly Sri Lankan journal Tribune. A clue to
  4. 50 The Poetical Works and the Poetic Language during the British Period in Sri Lanka There was a similar parallel in Sri Lanka between money earning enterprises and the printing of books. Tissa Kariyawasam (1973) says that at the beginning, there were some entrepreneurs who thought the printing industry was a profitable venture. They went
  5. of Sri Lanka. Popular traditions in this region also celebrate Ravana. The earliest reference to Sri Lanka in Indian literature is in Kautilya's 'Arthasasthra', (5th. Century B. C.) in which it is referred to as Pra Samudra, the land beyond the sea, even before it was called Palasimoundu and Simondou by Greek writers.
  6. Asian countries commenting on Sri Lankan ships only en passant. The authors quote one, Wolters 4, writing on Early Indonesian Commerce in 1967, as saying that: "Sri Lankan ships 'had a reputation for being large' but he noted that modern research undertaken bv Sri Lanka scholars did not suggest that the island had been 'a shippine
  7. a work to which the Sahitya Akademi is giving some help. From the Sri Venkateswara Oriental Institute has appeared a hitherto unpublished work of Sanskrit poetics, Rasaviveka of an unknown author, edited by T. K. V. N. Sudarsanacharya. The Deccan College Research Institute, Poona, published with
  8. has produced a list of authors whose works were adapted during the postwar period. As is to be expected, it shows that the adapted works were either by popular writers (the Quintero brothers ranked #1, with 13 adaptations) or by authors in favor of the regime, while no works by exiled writers are listed.
  9. Writers on the Film Adaptations of their Work Déjà Vu "As Yogi Berra said, It was déjà- vu all over again." A Hollywood legend: Once during his screenwriting days William Faulkner was hunting with the film director Howard Hawks and Clark Gable. When Gable asked him to name the best living writ-
  10. The Sri Lankan 'Microlithic' Tradition c. 38,000 to 3,000 Years Ago: Tropical Technologies and Adaptations of Homo sapiens at the Southern Edge of Asia Download; XML; Religion, Violence, and Emotion: Modes of Religiosity in the Neolithic and Bronze Age of Northern China Download; XML; Back Matter Download; XML

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