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Overview

Revisiting India’s Partition: New Essays on Memory, Culture, and Politics brings together scholars from across the globe to provide diverse perspectives on the continuing impact of the 1947 division of India on the eve of independence from the British Empire. The Partition caused a million deaths and displaced well over 10 million people. The trauma of brutal violence and displacement still haunts the survivors as well as their children and grandchildren. Nearly 70 years after this cataclysmic event, Revisiting India’s Partition explores the impact of the “Long Partition,” a concept developed by Vazira Zamindar to underscore the ongoing effects of the 1947 Partition upon all South Asian nations. In our collection, we extend and expand Zamindar’s notion of the Long Partition to examine the cultural, political, economic, and psychological impact the Partition continues to have on communities throughout the South Asian diaspora.

The nineteen interdisciplinary essays in this book provide a multi-vocal, multi-focal, transnational commentary on the Partition in relation to motifs, communities, and regions in South Asia that have received scant attention in previous scholarship. In their individual essays, contributors offer new engagements on South Asia in relation to several topics, including decolonization and post-colony, economic development and nation-building, cross-border skirmishes and terrorism, and nationalism. This book is dedicated to covering areas beyond Punjab and Bengal and includes analyses of how Sindh and Kashmir, Hyderabad, and more broadly South India, the Northeast, and Burma call for special attention in coming to terms with memory, culture and politics surrounding the Partition.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781498531061
Publisher: Lexington Books
Publication date: 03/23/2018
Pages: 400
Product dimensions: 5.96(w) x 8.93(h) x 1.23(d)

About the Author

Amritjit Singh is Langston Hughes Professor of English & African American Studies
at Ohio University.

Nalini Iyer is professor of English at Seattle University.

Rahul K. Gairola is assistant professor of English and comparative literature at the
Indian Institute of Technology Roorkee, Uttarakhand, India.

Table of Contents

Introduction

Section I: Approaches to Partition

Chapter 1. “Specters of Democracy/The Gender of Specters: Cultural Memory and the Indian Partition” - Radhika Mohanram

Chapter 2. “Lost Homes, Shifting Borders and the Search For Belonging” - Jasbir Jain

Chapter 3. “A Will to Say or Unsay: Female Silences and Discursive Interventions in Partition Narratives” - Parvinder Mehta

Chapter 4. “Migrations in Absentia: Multinational Digital Advertising and Manipulation of Partition Trauma - Rahul. K. Gairola

Section II: Nations and Narrations

Chapter 5. “Exorcizing the Ghosts of Times Past: Partition Memoirs as Testimony” - Tarun K. Saint

Chapter 6. “Difficult Choices: Work, Family, and Displaced Women in Partition Writings” - Debali Mookerjea-Leonard

Chapter 7. “Refugees as Homo Sacers: Partition and the National Imaginary in The Hungry Tide” - Amrita Ghosh

Section III. Borders and Borderlands

Chapter 8. “Property, Violence and Displacement: Partition in Sindh” - Nandita Bhavnani

Chapter 9. “The Long Shadow of 1947: Partition, Violence and Displacement in Jammu and Kashmir” - Ilyas Chattha

Chapter 10. “From Frontiers to Borders: Partition and the Production of Marginal Spaces in North East India” - Babyrani Yumnam

Chapter 11. “Looking East: Melodramatic Narrative, Ecotheater and the ‘Forgotten Long March’ in Jangam.” - Amit R. Baishya

Section IV. From Pakistan to Bangladesh

Chapter 12. “The Never-Ending Partition: Pakistan’s Self-Identification Dilemma”- Amber Fatima Riaz

Chapter 13. “Partition and the Bangladeshi Literary Response” - Kaiser Haq

Chapter 14. “Cosmopolitan Aesthetics in Shakeel Adil Zada’s Baazigar”- Masood A. Raja

Chapter 15. “The Nexus of Class, Identity and Politics in the Representational Economy of Partition: The Case of Hasan Azizul Huq” - Mohd. Rezaul Haque

Chapter 16. “Partition and Beyond: Intizar Husain’s Quest for Meaning and Vision” - Tasneem Shahnaaz and Amritjit Singh

Section V. Partitions Within

Chapter 17. “Buckle in the Hindu Belt: Contemporary Hindu-Muslim Violence and the Legacy of Partition in Banaras” - Jeremy A. Rinker

Chapter 18. “Hyderabad, Partition, and Hindutva: Strategic Revisitings in Neelkanth’s ‘Durga’ (2005)” - Nazia Akhtar

Chapter 19. “Partition’s Others: The View from South India” - Nalini Iyer
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