British-Bangladeshi Tahmima Anam’s debut novel A Golden Age (2007) is a mother-daughter tale of the Bangladesh War of Independence, and is set during an exceptional period of martial law. It is a story of resistance told from the margins, from a domestic space known as “Shona.” This paper explores how the struggle for independence is embodied by the actions of women, and analyzes how weaving violence and resistance into the fabric of mundane lives enables Anam to shed light on the 1971 Bangladesh genocide
Hasina and Shimu are garment factory workers; Hasina’s life is portrayed in Monica Ali’s 2003 debut ...
The archetype of the mother is always perceived as ‘pacifist’ in war and conflict situations. Howeve...
Under twenty years of war, women in Afghanistan suffer from oppressive situations and rules resultin...
Abstract The 1971 Bangladeshi Liberation war is one of the most significant and phenomenal event in...
Tahmima Anam is the first Bangladeshi novelist in English who draws international attention to the L...
Tahmima Anam depicts the attributes, qualities, joys, contributions, psychological strength, and suf...
This thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of MA in English Lan...
When remembering the civil war between East and West Pakistan in 1971, most accounts are told from a...
The year 1971 symbolizes an episode of a bloodbath in the history of South Asia. Popularly known as ...
In the postmodern era, one of the primary objectives of oral narratives is to tell the untold storie...
Female narratives hold an important place in literature as they tell stories from women’s perspect...
Since ancient time, women have been placed at the secondary role by the patriarchs in our society. T...
textThis paper approaches fiction as a site of gendered history and memory and presents two pieces o...
Feminism is one of the emerging trends these days in literature. We witness scores of writers who ha...
Although Bangladesh is one of the largest suppliers of interstate female domestic workers, most Bang...
Hasina and Shimu are garment factory workers; Hasina’s life is portrayed in Monica Ali’s 2003 debut ...
The archetype of the mother is always perceived as ‘pacifist’ in war and conflict situations. Howeve...
Under twenty years of war, women in Afghanistan suffer from oppressive situations and rules resultin...
Abstract The 1971 Bangladeshi Liberation war is one of the most significant and phenomenal event in...
Tahmima Anam is the first Bangladeshi novelist in English who draws international attention to the L...
Tahmima Anam depicts the attributes, qualities, joys, contributions, psychological strength, and suf...
This thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of MA in English Lan...
When remembering the civil war between East and West Pakistan in 1971, most accounts are told from a...
The year 1971 symbolizes an episode of a bloodbath in the history of South Asia. Popularly known as ...
In the postmodern era, one of the primary objectives of oral narratives is to tell the untold storie...
Female narratives hold an important place in literature as they tell stories from women’s perspect...
Since ancient time, women have been placed at the secondary role by the patriarchs in our society. T...
textThis paper approaches fiction as a site of gendered history and memory and presents two pieces o...
Feminism is one of the emerging trends these days in literature. We witness scores of writers who ha...
Although Bangladesh is one of the largest suppliers of interstate female domestic workers, most Bang...
Hasina and Shimu are garment factory workers; Hasina’s life is portrayed in Monica Ali’s 2003 debut ...
The archetype of the mother is always perceived as ‘pacifist’ in war and conflict situations. Howeve...
Under twenty years of war, women in Afghanistan suffer from oppressive situations and rules resultin...