In 1971, a war which took place in Pakistan that resulted in the
establishment of two separate countries; East Pakistan became
Bangladesh, leaving the remaining four western provinces to
comprise a truncated Pakistan. This book examines how literature by
those who remained Pakistanis acts as a cultural response to the
threat the war posed to a nationalist identity. It provides an
analysis of the writing by Pakistani authors in their attempt to
deal with the radical shock of the war and shows how fiction about
the war helps readers imagine what the paring down of the country
means for any abiding articulation of a Pakistani group
identification.
The author discusses English-and Urdu-language fictions in the
context of the historical debate about Pakistani nationalism,
including how such nationalism informs literary culture, and in the
contemporary interest in official apologies for the past. The
author organises the literary analysis around four key issues: the
domestic sphere and the family; the territorial limits of
citizenship; multiculturalism, class, and nationalist history; and
diasporic imaginings of the nation. These issues resonate across
the fictions in both languages and the author's analysis of them
traces how these works grapple with changing notions of what it
means to be Pakistani after the civil war and offers an interesting
discussion to studies in South Asia.
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