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This is a longitudinal study that treats the trajectory of ethical
discoveries about the European representation of world peoples
across more than one hundred and fifty years (1860-2010). This
study integrates literary representation and visual representations
of world peoples—images—to show in greater detail how trends of
the portrayal of race and culture are manifest across artistic and
scientific genres. This study integrates the history of
anthropology, trends in current anthropological research, and
literary representation to argue for a holistic, interdisciplinary
approach to understanding the French history of the representation
of world peoples. This study argues that subjectivity and
objectivity are interdependent terms, and that out of this
interdependence, a phenomenon called ethnographic aesthetics. This
study argues that the anthropological dispositif emerged in the
colonial-modern era and has shaped the French representation of
world peoples through tropes, ideology, observational practice, and
discursive clichés inherent in proto-anthropological and modern
anthropological thinking from the nineteenth century to today.
Basharat and his family are Indian Muslims who have relocated to
Pakistan, but who remain deeply steeped in the nostalgia of
pre-Partition life in India. Through Mirages of the Mind's absurd
anecdotes and unforgettable biographical sketches-which hide the
deeper unease and sorrow of the family's journey from Kanpur to
Karachi-Basharet emerges as a wise fool, and the host of this
unique sketch comedy. From humorous scenes in colonial north India,
to the heartbreak and homesickness of post-colonial life in
Pakistan, Mirages of the Mind forms an authentic portrait of life
among South Asia's Urdu speakers, rendered beautifully into English
by Matt Reeck and Aftab Ahmad.
Love Songs & Laments was selected by Jenni Russell.
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Bombay Stories (Paperback)
Saadat Hasan Manto; Translated by Matt Reeck, Aftab Ahmad; Introduction by Matt Reeck; Foreword by Mohammed Hanif
1
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R301
R251
Discovery Miles 2 510
Save R50 (17%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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A rebellious yet human portrait of India's bustling Bombay, as told
by one of the greatest Urdu writers of the last century: Saadat
Hasan Manto. 'The undisputed master of the modern Indian short
story' Salman Rushdie, Observer In the 1930s and 40s, Bombay was
the cosmopolitan capital of the subcontinent - an exhilarating hub
of license and liberty, bursting with both creative energy and
helpless degradation. It was also muse to the celebrated short
story writer of India and Pakistan, Saadat Hasan Manto. Manto's
hard-edged, moving stories remain, a hundred years after his birth,
startling and provocative. In searching out those forgotten by
humanity - prostitutes, conmen and crooks - Manto wrote about what
it means to be human.
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