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Article Name : | | A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF NATURE IN WORDSWORTH’S DAFFODILS AND BAALKAVI’S ANANDI ANAND GADE | Author Name : | | Manohar P. Joshi | Publisher : | | Ashok Yakkaldevi | Article Series No. : | | GRT-4996 | Article URL : | | | Author Profile View PDF In browser | Abstract : | | Comparative study has been a wider area for research and application opportunities. It is a recently developed approach to literature. The concept of comparative study of literature is a consequence of the comparative methodology adopted in various fields of human interests. The evolution of the word comparative in this context can be traced in the academic circles of Europe in the first quarter of the 19th century. The concept of comparative approach had another background consisting in the critical attempts at assessing literatures of European nations. The other international development which can be juxtaposed with comparative studies is the process of colonization. The European nations came in contact with the cultural and creative world of the colonized nations, giving rise to the interpretation of literatures through comparison. William Wordsworth and Baalkavi in spite of many differences share several dimensions which can be taken up for comparison. Wordsworth and Baalkavi have the similar theme of nature and its inherent pleasure. Both the poets found in nature an intrinsic harmony. | Keywords : | | |
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