Abstract

This paper examines indigenous epistemologies and the ways in which oral/verbal forms contribute to the archive of a people. By placing the central focus on the 66+ communities who identify under the exonym “Naga” situated across Assam, Manipur, Nagaland, and parts of Arunachal in the north- eastern part of India, the essay hopes to study emerging literature of the Nagas who are striving to find commonality between the language of speech and the language of writing.

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