Finding Neema - E-book - ePub

Edition en anglais

Juliet Reynolds

Note moyenne 
Finding Neema is the singular story of an autistic boy of Nepali-Tibetan ethnicity, brought up by the author and her Indian husband. It recounts the couple's... Lire la suite
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Résumé

Finding Neema is the singular story of an autistic boy of Nepali-Tibetan ethnicity, brought up by the author and her Indian husband. It recounts the couple's unplanned adoption of Neema, the son of their maid, Poonam; their efforts to have his autism diagnosed and treated; and Neema's emergence into adulthood as a valuable, though still dependent, human being. Delving into Neema's tormented early life and background, the book touches upon some of the more lurid aspects of developing world poverty and introduces us to an assorted cast of characters - some appealing and some appalling, but all of them colourful.
Important too are the insights into autism which emerge from the writing. Autism has become a burning issue of our times on account of its burgeoning incidence, and of the many controversies surrounding it, but there is very little writing on the subject outside the boundaries of the developed world. Narrating Neema's story with compassion, frankness and humour and interweaving it with reminiscences of her own unusual marriage and life, Juliet Reynolds fills that gap.

Caractéristiques

  • Date de parution
    19/07/2013
  • Editeur
  • ISBN
    978-93-5009-529-4
  • EAN
    9789350095294
  • Format
    ePub
  • Nb. de pages
    352 pages
  • Caractéristiques du format ePub
    • Pages
      352
    • Protection num.
      Contenu protégé

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À propos de l'auteur

Biographie de Juliet Reynolds

Juliet Reynolds is a writer and critic, specializing in Indian art and cultural-political issues. Of mixed Irish and English descent, she has spent most of her working life in India. She has contributed many pieces to the arts pages of the well-known London weekly, The Spectator. Among the Indian publications to which she has contributed is The Pioneer. From 1991-94, she wrote a weekly opinion piece for the op-ed page of this daily.
Other international and Indian publications to which she has contributed include: The India International Centre Quarterly Review, The Insight Guide to India, Biblio, Outlook, The Far Eastern Economic Review, The Economic Times, and The India Magazine. She is the author of In the Eyes of a Rasika, a book for the lay reader on the relationship between art and politics and art and science.
She also contributed to the book, India 60: Towards a New Paradigm, published by Harper Collins. Juliet is an occasional filmmaker. In 1995 she wrote and presented a film on B. C. Sanyal for BITV. In 1998-99 she wrote and co-directed three educational films on art for the University Grants Commission. In 2001 she directed The Art of the Impossible, a film portrait of the former Indian Prime Minister V P Singh.
In recent years she has been involved with programmes for children with autism. As part of this work, she has directed A for Autism.M for Mouse (2006), a film completed with the active support of the Information Technology Development Agency, Dehradun, and Inspiration, an organization dedicated to autism and other intellectual challenges, based in both New Delhi and Dehradun. Juliet was married to the highly reputed Indian artist Anil Karanjai who died in 2001.
Anil won a National Award from the Lalit Kala Akademi in 1972. Juliet is currently cataloguing Anil's lifework with a view to a major publication. She divides her life between New Delhi and Dehradun.

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