Poetcrit- (An International Refereed Bi-Annual Journal of Literary Criticism & Contemporary Poetry)

Current Volume: 39 (2026 )

ISSN: 0970-2830

Periodicity: Half-Yearly

Month(s) of Publication: January & July

Subject: Language & Literature

DOI: https://doi.org/10.32381/POET

Online Access is Free for all Life Members of Poetcrit

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Poetcrit is now 38 years old Indian journal in continuous circulation in the country. It is internationally known and has successfully crated a critical climate for the past 38 years also influencing the academia about new areas of literature. However, its main impetus is on Indian English Literature. It has brought its reputation is such that it receives more than a dozen Indian Journals in exchange for it.

"Abstracted and Indexed in EBSCO Host" USA

 

Founder Editor
Late D. C. Chambial

Editor
Sulakshna Sharma

Aarti Chandel Parmar

Co-Editor
Kurt. F. Svatek

Managing Editor
Sienna Chambial

Advisors
Atma Ram

PCK Prem

Senior Fellow Vivekananda International Foundation
Former Director,Maulana Abdul Kalam Azad Institute of Asian Studies, Kolkata


R K Singh

 


AK Chaudhary

 


KV Dominic

 


Rob Harle

 


Ramesh K. Srivastava

 


Volume 39 Issue 1 , (Jan-2026 to Jun-2026)

The Plights and Persecutions of the Dalits and the Deserted in the Plays of Bhikhari Thakur: A Critical Exploration

By: Amar Nath Prasad

Page No : 1-10

Abstract
The present paper is devoted to a critical study of the pitiable plights and oppressions of the downtrodden and the deserted in the plays of Bhikhari Thakur, a great Bhojpuri playwright. It also makes an attempt to explore the subject in the light of the ideology of Dr. B. R. Ambedkar which exercised great influence on the works of Bhikhari Thakur. Bhikhari Thakur, often hailed as the “Shakespeare of Bhojpuri,” used the stage as a mirror to reflect the harsh realities of rural and marginalised life in colonial and postcolonial Bihar. His dramas—such as Bidesiya, Beti Bechwa, and Gabarghichor—are not mere folk performances but powerful social commentaries that expose the plights and persecutions faced by the oppressed, especially women, Dalits, and migrant labourers. Through vivid storytelling, lyrical Bhojpuri language, and emotionally charged characters, Thakur brings to light the pain of caste discrimination, gender injustice, poverty, and forced migration. His works challenge feudal norms and caste hierarchies while offering a voice to those historically silenced. This study explores how Bhikhari Thakur’s dramatic art that becomes a vehicle for resistance, empathy, and reform, blending folk aesthetics with a deep moral and social consciousness.

Author
Dr. Amar Nath Prasad, Professor and Head, Department of English, Jai Prakash University, Chapra, Bihar.
 

DOI : https://doi.org/10.32381/POET.2026.39.01.1

Price: 101

Gitanjali: Bhakti Lyrics for Humanistic and Realistic Approaches

By: Rajamouly Katta

Page No : 11-17

Abstract
Gitanjali, the most popular English work (1913) of Viswakavi, Rabindranath Tagore, achieved the Nobel Prize for literature as a mark of distinction in the Indian tradition. Its popularity as the best translation of his Bengali original (1909) is unrivalled to have won international acclaim. It excels for its kaleidoscopic themes: Bhakthi or the adoration for the Divine, the love for nature and man, the concept of work, etc. For him, God manifests in all natural elements. He proclaims his ardent love for the Divine and seeks the communion of God and man. He firmly believes that the Divine inspires him to compose songs in praise of God. He also deeply feels that they are his true and befitting offerings to Him. They are his devotional songs with musical undertones reflecting his Bhakti, fervent adoration and ardent devotion to God. There is a clear-cut influence of the Vishnava Bhakti poets and the Brahmasamaj on him apart from his understanding of humanistic approaches to composing Bhakti lyrics. His poetry reflects the echoes of Jayadeva, Vidyapathi and Chandidas. He imbibed the concepts of humanity, fraternity, humility, equality, and equanimity from the knowledge of different religions to the core for his humanistic and pragmatic approach to life. The readers of Gitanjali feel at home in understanding his philosophy of life. They enjoy felicitous expressions of passions, yearnings, and ideals in the rhythmic flow of words by the use of vivid images of natural objects and common people to mark a wide range. His exceptional intellectual abilities and distinguished literary talents under the rich experience of Bhakti cult enable him to expound the ethos of Indian life in fresh and natural style through his writings. Referring to his poems, Prof. Mao Shichang, his bosom friend told The Hindu in an interview on 24th March 2012, “Tagore was like the god of poems in my heart.” Tagore’s multisided genius and multifaceted personality, has established him as the symbol of Indian Renaissance.

Author
Prof. Dr. Rajamouly Katta
, Author, Writer, Editor, Novelist, Poet. Professor & Head of Dept. of English, Ganapathy Engineering College, Warangal (Telangana State).
 

DOI : https://doi.org/10.32381/POET.2026.39.01.2

Price: 101

Raghupathi Goes to Rio: Dialogues with Roberto Alexandre

By: Thudum Venkataramana

Page No : 18-28

Author
Thudum Venkataramana, Lecturer in English, Government Degree College for Men (Autonomous), KADAPA, Andhra Pradesh, India.
 

DOI : https://doi.org/10.32381/POET.2026.39.01.3

Price: 101

Indian English Short Fiction: Amazing Ethos and Contemporaneity in K. V. Dominic’s Tales of Ethos

By: Suresh Chandra Pande

Page No : 29-40

Author
Dr. Suresh Chandra Pande:
 Professor of English (Retd.), contemporary critic and poet of wide renown from Nainital (Uttrakhand).
 

DOI : https://doi.org/10.32381/POET.2026.39.01.4

Price: 101

Bama’s Sangati: A Significant Contribution to Dalit Writing in India

By: Rajoo Kumar Ram

Page No : 41-46

Abstract
Bama Faustina Soosai Raj is a modern Dalit woman fiction writer, who is commonly known as Bama in the field of Indian Writing in English in general and Dalit Writing in particular. She has to her credit a number of great works, describing the Dalit woman sentiments, their plights and persecutions in the hands of patriarchal society as well as the Upper-class society where the Dalit and the deserted have a little say in all the spheres of life. Her autobiographical work, Karukku (1992) is an autobiographical novel dealing with the struggles of women character in a male dominated society under the sky of caste-ridden mentality. Her famous work, Sangati (1992), is the other great work which deals with the sufferings and deep distresses of the Dalit women, who have to face the double disadvantage of caste and gender discrimination. This book presents a very realistic picture of poverty, impoverishment, malnutrition and some other social evils suffered by the Dalit women of the society. The present paper is devoted to a critical study of the various issues of Dalit woman characters through the lens of Bama who has herself felt and experienced all these sufferings.

Author
Rajoo Kumar Ram,
Research Scholar, Dept. of English, J. P. University, Chapra.
 

DOI : https://doi.org/10.32381/POET.2026.39.01.5

Price: 101

Rahul Sankrityayan’s Japan Travels and His Quest for Buddhist Linkages

By: Anushree

Page No : 47-60

Author
Dr. Anushree,
Assistant Professor, Centre for Japanese Studies, School of Language, Literature and Culture Studies, Jawaharlal Nehru University.
 

DOI : https://doi.org/10.32381/POET.2026.39.01.6

Price: 101

A Critical Analysis of Soliloquy of a Sailor by Dr. Manas Bakshi

By: Suresh Pande

Page No : 61-68

Author
Dr. Suresh Pande,
Contemporary major poet and critic from Nanital (UK).
 

DOI : https://doi.org/10.32381/POET.2026.39.01.7

Price: 101

Invisible Yet Invincible: Women’s Struggles and Strength from Ancient Silence to Modern Voices

By: Apurva Kanakrai Joshi

Page No : 69-78

Abstract
Women’s position in society has shifted across historical eras, yet the foundational structures of patriarchy continue to shape their experiences. This research paper traces the long arc of women’s struggles and resilience from ancient civilisations to the digital twenty-first century. It argues that while women have often been invisible in dominant historical narratives, they have remained invincible in spirit, survival, and resistance. Through a comparative study of ancient, medieval, colonial, and contemporary contexts, this paper examines how power, culture, religion, law, and social norms shaped gender roles and constrained women’s autonomy. Drawing from feminist theorists such as Simone de Beauvoir, Judith Butler, bell hooks, and Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, the study highlights the construction of gender, the internalisation of control, and the politics of female agency. The analysis includes women from mythology, history, literature, reform movements, and modern feminist activism to show that resistance is neither new nor uniform; instead, it evolves with each era. The paper concludes that patriarchy harms not only women but also men, creating rigid expectations around masculinity, emotional expression, and social behaviour. True social progress requires dismantling these inherited power structures to create a world in which both women and men can experience freedom, dignity, and equality.

Author
Apurva Kanakrai Joshi,
 Goldmedalist, Perusing M.A. English, Shri P. K. Chaudhari Mahila Arts College, Gandhinagar, Gujarat.
 

DOI : https://doi.org/10.32381/POET.2026.39.01.8

Price: 101

Self-Realization and Sufism in the Poetry of S. L. Peeran

By: Mashrique Jahan

Page No : 79-84

Abstract
S. L. Peeran is an important figure in the contemporary Indian English Poetry. He has surprised the poetry world during the last fifteen years by presenting eighteen noteworthy volumes of poetry. He writes on various themes which include self-realisation, spiritual consciousness, nature, humanity, love for God, love for human, family relationship, hope, sympathy, corruption, and currant issues. Being a legal practitioner and a former Judge by profession his socio-political awareness is well reflected in his poems and as a result, his tone is moralistic, compassionate, consoling, and solicitous.
‘Love for human being’ and ‘Love for God’ are the dominant themes of his poetry and almost in every collection he has presented these themes. Like Vivekananda and Aurobindo, Peeran also stressed on universal brotherhood and unity of mankind as the religion of world. One finds in an assimilation of diverse religions and cultural ideals and notions that manifest his tolerant mind. In Sufism four consciousnesses have been recognized: Naf’s-e Ammarah, Naf’s-e Mutmaeena, Naf’s-e Lawwamah and Naf’s-e Radhia. Out of four my paper is highlighting mostly on Naf’s-e Mutmaeena and Naf’s-e Radhia out of Peeran’s poetry. This paper is a benign effort to present S. L. Peeran as a contemporary Sufi Poet.

Author
Dr. Mashrique Jahan,
M.A, MPhil, PhD in English, H.O.D, Deptt. of English (YSNM College, Medininagar), Palamu, Jharkhand; Authored a book named “Spiritual Consciousness in the Poetry of S L Peeran”.
 

DOI : https://doi.org/10.32381/POET.2026.39.01.9

Price: 101

The Essence of Poetry

By: Rajamouly Katta

Page No : 85-92

Author
Prof. Dr Rajamouly Katta,
Author, Writer, Editor, Novelist, Poet. Professor & Head Dept. of English, Ganapathy Engineering College, Warangal (Telangana State).
 

DOI : https://doi.org/10.32381/POET.2026.39.01.10

Price: 101

Partition, Violence and Women’s Suffering: What the Body Remembers

By: Archana Thakur

Page No : 93-102

Author
Dr. Archana Thakur,
Assistant Professor, English, PSR Govt. College, Baijnath.
 

DOI : https://doi.org/10.32381/POET.2026.39.01.11

Price: 101

Poems for January-June, 2026

By: ..

Page No : 103-212

Abroad: Cameron Hindrum and Rika Inami
India: Bhaskar Roy Barman, R.K. Singh, Shivkant Kumar Singh, O.P. Arora, Dharam Paul, Biswanath Kundu, S.L. Peeran, Binod Mishra, Saroj K. Padhi, K. Balachandran, S. Padmapriya, Rajamouly Katta, Khirod Malik, R.M. Prabhulinga Shastry, S.A. Hamid, KV Raghupathi, Sangita Konar, KV Dominic, Krishna Gopal, Susheel Kumar Sharma, Dalip Khetarpal, Nandini, Bipin Patsani, Manas Bakshi, Sanjoy Saren, B.C. Dwibedy, Satish Gore, Muzdlafa Shaikh, Hemanta Pramanik, Gargi Saha.

Price: 101

Poems in Translation

By: Rajamouly Katta

Page No : 213-218

Price: 101

Book Reviewed
Medusa by Nandini Sahu, Leaves of Silence: Poems and Micropoems by Ram Krishna Singh, Tell Me, Please.... By Abnish Singh Chauhan, Sunrise to Sunset: Poems and Short Stories by S.L Peeran, The Making of Womanhood: Gender Relations in Mahabharta by Shalini Shah, Spun Yarn: Stories, Essays & other Miscellanies by Richard Rose

By: ..

Page No : 219-247

Reviewers for January-June, 2026
Shatrughan Kahar, Wani Nazir, Pravat Kumar Padhy, Hemanta Pramanik, Soumita Mitra and Sulakshna Sharma

Price: 101

Instruction to the Author

Deadline for submissions: January issue: 1st September Articles (3000 words)/ Poems (20-25 lines) and July Issue: 1st March appended with a certificate that the article/ Poem is original and unpublished.

Complete Postal Address on the Title Page be emailed to the Editor: Poetcrit accept only well-written research papers following MLA 7yh/8th edition.
Correspondence:
Editor: Poetcrit, Maranda-176102 H.P. (India) Email: editorpoetcrit@gmail.com

All the manuscripts submitted for publication in Poetcrit should accompany a covering letter giving an undertaking following certain principles under Ethical Policy. The cover letter should include a written statement from the author(s) that:
1. The manuscript is an original research work and has not been published elsewhere including open access at the internet.
2. The data used in the research has not been manipulated, fabricated, or in any other way misrepresented to support the conclusions.
3. No part of the text of the manuscript has been plagiarized.
4. The manuscript is not under consideration for publication elsewhere.
5. The manuscript will not be submitted elsewhere for review while it is still under consideration for publication in POETCRIT.

The cover letter should also include an ethical statement disclosing any conflict of interest that may directly or indirectly impart bias to the research work. Conflict of interest most commonly arises from the source of funding, and therefore, the name(s) of the funding agency must be mentioned in the cover letter. In case of no conflict of interest, please include the statement that “the authors declare that they have no conflict of interest

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