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PARTITION LITERATURE (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   149783


Alienation, Displacement and Home in Mohan Kalpana's Jalavatni / Lalchandani, Trisha   Journal Article
Lalchandani, Trisha Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract In the absence of a linguistically defined region of their own, the migration of Sindhi Hindus to India was particularly painful and humiliating. It propelled the refugees to either embrace homogenisation or move into unknown territory. Mohan Kalpana's Jalavatni is a rare document in Partition literature. It brings to the literary archive of Partition a hard-hitting voice hitherto missing—the voice of rage at the hostility of the host nation rather than a gruesome account of violence, the struggle for home, the paucity of resources, and the rejection associated with identity. This paper introduces the reader to this untranslated and hence unknown story of amorphous citizenship and estrangement in the wake of Partition.
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2
ID:   149786


Muhajirs as a diaspora in Intizar Husain's the sea lies ahead and Kamila Shamsie's Kartography / Kumar, Priya   Journal Article
Kumar, Priya Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract This essay argues that diaspora is a useful analytical category for understanding certain migrant populations engendered by Partition, but not all Partition migrants can be designated as diasporas. Through a close reading of two novels—Intizar Husain's The Sea Lies Ahead (translated from the Urdu original Aage Samandar Hai by Rakhshanda Jalil) and Kamila Shamsie's Kartography—I show how Urdu-speaking migrants from India's Muslim minority provinces who migrated to the urban centres of Sindh have invented and preserved themselves as a diaspora in post-Partition Pakistan. Both novels enable us to see how Muhajirs have become a community based on a shared ideology of displacement that is kept alive in the group's memory.
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