ABSTRACT

The book is an anthology of creative and critical responses to the many partitions of India within and across borders. By widening and reframing the question of partition in the subcontinent from one event in 1947 to a larger series of partitions, the book presents a deeper perspective both on the concept of partition in understanding South Asia, and understanding the implications from survivors, victims and others. The imagery of the barbed wire in the title is used precisely to confront the jaggedness of experiencing and surviving partition that still haunts the national, literary, religious and political matrices of India.

The volume is a compilation of short stories, poems, articles, news reports and memoirs, with each contributor bringing forth their perception of partition and its effects on their life and identity. The many narratives amplify the human cost of partitions, examining the complexities of a bruised nation at the social, psychological and religious levels of consciousness.

The book will appeal to anyone interested in literary studies, history, politics, sociology, cultural studies, and comparative literature.

chapter |26 pages

Introduction

part |139 pages

Part One

part |50 pages

Crossings Over: Rememory(ing) the Loss

chapter 2|5 pages

‘Hello Khuku!’*

chapter 3|1 pages

Across Boundaries*

chapter 4|9 pages

The Distance to Lahore

chapter 5|16 pages

Living the Dream

Narrating a Landscape Lost and a Land Left Behind*

chapter 6|13 pages

The Ultimate Dislocation

Migrations, Histories and the Human

part |53 pages

Bruised Nation: Tropes of Violence

chapter 8|8 pages

The Emblematic Body

Women and Nationalism in Partition Narratives*

chapter 9|8 pages

Holocausts and Human Hearts

A Study of Rajinder Singh Bedi’s ‘Lajwanti’

chapter 10|22 pages

Recalling the ‘City of the Dreadful Night’

Narratives of Partition — Salil Choudhury, Manas Ray, Hélène Cixous

part |33 pages

Reconstructing Identities: Strategies of Survival

chapter 11|21 pages

Dismemberment and/or Reconstitution

Visual Representations of the Partition of Bengal

part |120 pages

Part Two

part |69 pages

Of Borders, Barbed Wires and the Unending Trail: Map Makings and Map Makings (The North-East and The East)

chapter 14|14 pages

Thinking and Rethinking Partition in the North-East

Colonial and Post-colonial Assam

chapter 16|6 pages

At the Crossroads

The Representation of Violence in Contemporary Assamese Poetry*

chapter 18|8 pages

Bangladesh

Language Movement and Dhirendranath Datta

chapter 19|13 pages

Of Bangladesh and East India

Fictional Representation of Violence and Migration after 1947*

chapter 21|8 pages

Pushback*

part |22 pages

The Agony of Desire: Kashmir

chapter 23|5 pages

In the Shadow of Militancy

The Diary of an Unknown Kashmiri (Excerpts)*

chapter 24|9 pages

Special Reports from Kashmir

part |26 pages

Partitions: The Undying Angst