![]() Despite differences of country and socio-political and cultural conditions, the similarity in the life experience of the two communities derives from the fact that both were targets of excess injustice and exploitation - their experience of pain is of a world-scale. Both literatures speak about struggles for human rights and against exploitation. ![]() There are numerous instances of painful experiences and fighting instincts that find expression in these literatures. The author has explicitly highlighted how Dalit and Aboriginal literatures are mirror images of the lives of the people in terms of sorrows, problems, pains and revolts of Dalit and Aboriginal societies. The study investigates the characteristics of these convergences and divergences between the two literatures. Given the fact that the two societies are different in terms of place and time, country, region, conditions and languages, it is understandable that while there are certain similarities, there are limitations and differences as well, convergences as well as divergences. ![]() To accomplish this, the author has taken into consideration some of the most important autobiographies from the two domains of writings. The present book is essentially a comparative discourse on literatures of margin -marginality/subalternity- i.e., between Dalit literature in India and Aboriginal literature in Australia that seeks to look more closely at one of the most important literary genres - autobiography.
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