A comparative study of Liana Badr’s The Eye of the Mirror and Bapsi Sidhwa’s Cracking India shows that these two novels present intriguingly similar feminist frameworks through which the traumas of war and communal violence may be addressed. They do so by erasing the distinction between literary work and critical social history, producing what we may term counterhistories of the Lebanese Civil War and the Partition of India. In both of these novels, a girl upon the verge of sexual maturation sees the eruption of violence in the society around her to be fundamentally analogous to the inherent violence that accompanies the new social role she is being thrust into as a woman—this is achieved through the presentation of the narrative from the c...
This thesis sets out to do close readings of the Pakistani author Bapsi Sidhwa’s novels The Pakistan...
The thesis “Saraswati’s Inkpot: Memory, the body and Mother India in Indian women’s post-Partition l...
The increasing visibility of armed women in violent conflicts in the modern world has unsettled conv...
This study presents an analysis of the trauma and sacrifice of the female body within the genre of S...
Reality is like a mirror upon which a person establishes their own sense of self and world. By inter...
This paper proposes a critical comparative analysis of two literary works dealing with the theme of ...
Women Writing Independence, Partition and Communal Violence explores the important role literature h...
The 1947 Partition of British India marked the birth of two new nations and yet, at the same time, i...
The partition narratives of South Asian authors are testimony to the fact that women of all ethnic a...
ii This thesis examines fictional representations of Indian women’s responses to trauma in the backg...
A study of the man-woman relationship as narrated in the modern literature of the East and the West ...
In this thesis, I will analyze literary and cinematic representations of sexual violence during Part...
In this dissertation, I focus on literary representations of the partition of British India in 1947 ...
On a surface level, the women in Bapsi Sidhwa’s Cracking India appear to be entirely victimized: ...
Abstract The present paper through a study of the selected novels of Bapsi Sidhwa tries to vocalise ...
This thesis sets out to do close readings of the Pakistani author Bapsi Sidhwa’s novels The Pakistan...
The thesis “Saraswati’s Inkpot: Memory, the body and Mother India in Indian women’s post-Partition l...
The increasing visibility of armed women in violent conflicts in the modern world has unsettled conv...
This study presents an analysis of the trauma and sacrifice of the female body within the genre of S...
Reality is like a mirror upon which a person establishes their own sense of self and world. By inter...
This paper proposes a critical comparative analysis of two literary works dealing with the theme of ...
Women Writing Independence, Partition and Communal Violence explores the important role literature h...
The 1947 Partition of British India marked the birth of two new nations and yet, at the same time, i...
The partition narratives of South Asian authors are testimony to the fact that women of all ethnic a...
ii This thesis examines fictional representations of Indian women’s responses to trauma in the backg...
A study of the man-woman relationship as narrated in the modern literature of the East and the West ...
In this thesis, I will analyze literary and cinematic representations of sexual violence during Part...
In this dissertation, I focus on literary representations of the partition of British India in 1947 ...
On a surface level, the women in Bapsi Sidhwa’s Cracking India appear to be entirely victimized: ...
Abstract The present paper through a study of the selected novels of Bapsi Sidhwa tries to vocalise ...
This thesis sets out to do close readings of the Pakistani author Bapsi Sidhwa’s novels The Pakistan...
The thesis “Saraswati’s Inkpot: Memory, the body and Mother India in Indian women’s post-Partition l...
The increasing visibility of armed women in violent conflicts in the modern world has unsettled conv...