Taslima Nasreen, the exiled Bangladeshi author, was forced to leave India, her adopted homeland, in March 2008 after being under ‘security protection’ for months following street agitation against her writings in Kolkata. The events between August 2007, when she was physically attacked in Hyderabad, and March 2008, when she left the country, were reminiscent of those in Bangladesh in 1994 which led to her departure from there. In both instances, the states’ responses were her forced removal from the country to placate the agitators. In this paper I analyze the events on the ground and the responses of the states. I argue that these events demonstrate how ‘outraged communities’ are constructed, and symbols are invented to mobilize the commun...
This paper analyses responses in London to the International Crimes Tribunal in Bangladesh and prote...
This paper examines the ‘textbook controversy’ (2000-2005) that arose when the Pakistan state introd...
This paper examines the ‘textbook controversy’ (2000-2005) that arose when the Pakistan state introd...
Abstract. Taslima Nasreen, the exiled Bangladeshi author, was forced to leave India, her adopted hom...
Taslima Nasrin, a Bangladeshi writer, attracted international attention in 1994 ...
Taslima Nasrin, a Bangladeshi writer, attracted international attention in 1994 when an obscure reli...
Taslima Nasrin, the writer from Bangladesh, shot into international fame and limelight with the publ...
The novel 'Lajja' (Shame) was first published in Bengali in Bangladesh in 1993. The English translat...
The oppositional protests against the Citizenship Amendment Bill burst into international consciousn...
Of the many feminist voices in Bangladesh, Taslima Nasrin is the best known for the censorship, fatw...
On 16 December 2012, a twenty-three year old physiotherapist was gangraped in Munirka, New Delhi by ...
From 2013, groups associated with Al Qaeda in the Indian Subcontinent systematically targeted secula...
We return to the notion of generational communities introduced in this special issue in light of the...
This article argues that different types of politically motivated violence in South Asia are associa...
This paper argues that the main reason for political discontent and violence in Kashmir has to do wi...
This paper analyses responses in London to the International Crimes Tribunal in Bangladesh and prote...
This paper examines the ‘textbook controversy’ (2000-2005) that arose when the Pakistan state introd...
This paper examines the ‘textbook controversy’ (2000-2005) that arose when the Pakistan state introd...
Abstract. Taslima Nasreen, the exiled Bangladeshi author, was forced to leave India, her adopted hom...
Taslima Nasrin, a Bangladeshi writer, attracted international attention in 1994 ...
Taslima Nasrin, a Bangladeshi writer, attracted international attention in 1994 when an obscure reli...
Taslima Nasrin, the writer from Bangladesh, shot into international fame and limelight with the publ...
The novel 'Lajja' (Shame) was first published in Bengali in Bangladesh in 1993. The English translat...
The oppositional protests against the Citizenship Amendment Bill burst into international consciousn...
Of the many feminist voices in Bangladesh, Taslima Nasrin is the best known for the censorship, fatw...
On 16 December 2012, a twenty-three year old physiotherapist was gangraped in Munirka, New Delhi by ...
From 2013, groups associated with Al Qaeda in the Indian Subcontinent systematically targeted secula...
We return to the notion of generational communities introduced in this special issue in light of the...
This article argues that different types of politically motivated violence in South Asia are associa...
This paper argues that the main reason for political discontent and violence in Kashmir has to do wi...
This paper analyses responses in London to the International Crimes Tribunal in Bangladesh and prote...
This paper examines the ‘textbook controversy’ (2000-2005) that arose when the Pakistan state introd...
This paper examines the ‘textbook controversy’ (2000-2005) that arose when the Pakistan state introd...