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Mysteries and surprises abound, by Amendra Pokhael (rep 09/12/2011)
Literary transitions: New Nepali literature will confront violence and globalisation (kp 18/09/2011)
Outcastes in literature, by Bidushi Dhungel (kp 17/09/2011)
State of the art: Nepali literature, by Ujjwal Prasai (kp 17/09/2011)
Litterateurs pin high hope on litfest (kp 07/09/2011)
The stuff of intellectual life: Nepal now has a literature festival, and not just one, by Manjushree Thapa (nt 19/08/2011)
Call
for resuscitation: Children’s literature remains a neglected genre in
Nepal, suffering a lack of quality in both content and language, by Mahesh Paudyal (kp 13/08/2011)
Long time no see: Nepali writers from Nepal and India are assembling after losing contact for three decades, by Abhi Subedi (kp 06/07/2011)
Toothpick romance and more: Literary figures give crash course to upcoming Nepali writers, by Colin Cooper (kp 30/04/2011)
O
writers, help thyself! The culture of literary criticism in Nepal,
distorted by loyalties and an aversion to critical feedback, is hurting
the progressof Nepali writers , by Ujjwal Prasai (kp 05/02/2011)
The Future of Nepali Literature, by Manjushree Thapa (kp 01/01/2011)
‘Seto
Bagh’ now available in MP3 (nn 20/06/2010)
Lost
in translation, by Ujjwal Prasai (kp 19/06/2010)
Modnath
Prashrit: A Rebel Writer, by Yuba Nath Lamsal (rn 21/05/2010)
International
Nepali literature conference (rn 20/03/2010), Conference
on Nepali language (ht 20/03/2010), Online
media help promote Nepali language (rn 21/03/2010)
Oxford
publishes Nepali epic in English, by Arhan Sthapit (rn 26/02/2010)
The
pen is mightier: Where are our freedom fighters who can infuse
patriotism into their poetry and let that shape the new constitution?,
by Sushma Joshi (kp 07/02/2010)
Paras
Mani Pradhan: ‘Touchstone’ Of Nepali Literature, by Yuba Nath
Lamsal (rn 29/01/2010) |