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The story has also inspired other adaptations, including an audiobook version narrated by Matt Montanez in 2024, [4] a dramatic reading available on multiple platforms, and a graphic novel adaptation by Jim Tierney published in 2012. [5] Additionally, the story has been performed as a stage adaptation by the Portland Stage Company in 2011. [6]
His 2013 novel, The Mirror of Beauty, was a translation of Kai Chand The Sar-e Asman, his 2006 Urdu novel. The book chronicled the life of Wazir Khanum, mother of late-19th-century Indian Urdu poet Daagh Dehlvi, and was set in that time's Delhi. [11] [12] The book was shortlisted for the DSC Prize for South Asian Literature. [11]
See also under {{Section link}}: required section parameter(s) missing: Illusory truth effect (Illusion-of-truth effect) People are more likely to identify as true statements those they have previously heard (even if they cannot consciously remember having heard them), regardless of the actual validity of the statement.
Some writers define sentience exclusively as the capacity for valenced (positive or negative) mental experiences, such as pain or pleasure. [5] Others differentiate between the mere ability to perceive sensations, such as light or pain, and the ability to perceive emotions , such as fear or grief .
Usha Priyamvada is the nom-de-plume of Usha Nilsson (née Usha Saksena; born 1930) is an Indian-born American emerita professor of South Asian Studies at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, a novelist and short-story writer in Hindi and a translator from Hindi to English. She was a winner of the Premchand Prize in 1976, and the Padmabhushan ...
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Maulvi Nazir Ahmad Dehlvi, also known as Deputy Nazir Ahmad, was an Urdu novel writer, social and religious reformer, and orator. Even today, he is best known for his novels, he wrote over 30 books on subjects such as law, logic, ethics and linguistics. [1] His famous novels are Mirat-ul-Uroos, Tobat-un-Nasuh, and Ibn-ul-waqt.
According to the looking-glass self, how you see yourself depends on how you think others perceive you. The term looking-glass self was created by American sociologist Charles Horton Cooley in 1902, [1] and introduced into his work Human Nature and the Social Order. It is described as our reflection of how we think we appear to others. [2]