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Home, Uprooted - Oral Histories of India's Partition (Paperback)
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Home, Uprooted - Oral Histories of India's Partition (Paperback)
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The Indian Independence Act of 1947 granted India freedom from
British rule, signaling the formal end of the British Raj in the
subcontinent. This freedom, though, came at a price: partition, the
division of the country into India and Pakistan, and the communal
riots that followed. These riots resulted in the deaths of an
estimated 1 million Hindus and Muslims and the displacement of
about 20 million persons on both sides of the border. This
watershed socioeconomic-geopolitical moment cast an enduring shadow
on India's relationship with neighboring Pakistan. Presenting a
perspective of the middle-class refugees who were forced from their
homes, jobs, and lives with the withdrawal of British rule in
India, Home, Uprooted delves into the lives of forty-five Partition
refugees and their descendants to show how this epochal event
continues to shape their lives.
Exploring the oral histories of three generations of refugees from
India's Partition--ten Hindu and Sikh families in Delhi, Home,
Uprooted melds oral histories with a fresh perspective on current
literature to unravel the emergent conceptual nexus of home,
travel, and identity in the stories of the participants. Author
Devika Chawla argues that the ways in which her participants
imagine, recollect, memorialize, or "abandon" home in their
everyday narratives give us unique insights into how refugee
identities are constituted. These stories reveal how migrations are
enacted and what home--in its sense, absence, and presence--can
mean for displaced populations.
Written in an accessible and experimental style that blends
biography, autobiography, essay, and performative writing, Home,
Uprooted folds in field narratives with Chawla's own family
history, which was also shaped by the Partition event and her
self-propelled migration to North America. In contemplating and
living their stories of home, she attempts to show how her own
ancestral legacies of Partition displacement bear relief.
Home--how we experience it and what it says about the "selves" we
come to occupy--is a crucial question of our contemporary moment.
Home, Uprooted delivers a unique and poignant perspective on this
timely question. This compilation of stories offers an iteration of
how diasporic migrations might be enacted and what "home" means to
displaced populations.
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