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  • Anglo-American Culture  (1)
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  • Anglo-American Culture  (1)
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    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    University Press of Florida ; 2021
    In:  Journal of Global Postcolonial Studies Vol. 8, No. 2 ( 2021-07-14)
    In: Journal of Global Postcolonial Studies, University Press of Florida, Vol. 8, No. 2 ( 2021-07-14)
    Abstract: Kamila Shamsie writes revisionary historiography of her country. Official historiography erases some very significant areas and experiences which she has tried to recuperate, thus redefining the role of a postcolonial writer in the society. This article examines the relationship between history, memory and experience in Shamsie’s novels, elaborating on their potential to change the collective or individual lives of people in a society that is in the process of transition. Shamsie takes up challenges of putting a chaotic world in order, of recording what official histories erase most often. Her novels are penetrating analyses of Pakistan’s recent troubled history. She talks of the break-up of Pakistan in 1971, of the insecure, uncertain and perturbed times under the despotic rule of Zia’s regime, and ethnic violence in Karachi. History in her novels is not only the knowledge of past, it is also the continuity of past in present. She shows that what happened then is happening now, back and forth, now and then; the conflict between Bengalis and the rest of Pakistan in 1971 and now between native Karachites and Muhajirs or immigrants in the 1980s. Such frictions and hostilities produced fissures in the tight-knit social groups. Shamsie portrays this history painstakingly, as she identifies history as a major sight for the identity formation of any country.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 2643-8399 , 2643-8380
    Language: Unknown
    Publisher: University Press of Florida
    Publication Date: 2021
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