You are here

Literaty Response To Partition In Pakistan

Journal Name:

Publication Year:

Author Name
Abstract (Original Language): 
There were writers who migrated to Pakistan, simply because they were Muslims. Some of them were prejudiced and took up the pen to show the cruelties perpetrated by Sikhs and Hindus. Others, who were not from Pakistan, revealed a deep nostalgia for a state where Hindus and Muslims had dwelt peacefully together until the coming of Partition.
FULL TEXT (PDF): 
1-2

REFERENCES

References: 

1. “Partition Literature: A Study of Intizar Hussain”, Modern
Asian Studies, vol. 14, No.3, 1980, pp.370-410
2. Zaman , op.cit., p.279
3. Manto's life and historical evaluation of his Partition
stories.
4. As quoted in Hasan Anders Bjorn, Partition and Genocide:
Manifestation of Violence in Punjab 1937-1947 (New Delhi:
India Research Press, 2002), p.1
5. Ritu Menon and Kamla Bhasin in Borders and Boundaries,
op. cit., and by Urvashi Butalia in The Other Side of Silence:
Voices from the Partition of India, (New Delhi: Penguin
India,
1998).

Thank you for copying data from http://www.arastirmax.com