One of the characteristics of much of the existing scholarship about the India/Pakistan partition of 1947 is that it usually privileges the refugee experience as the quintessential partition experience. The voices that are heard most prominently are of those who migrated. As a consequence, an unacceptably large proportion of partition scholarship has reflected the hegemonic binary of a Hindu India, and an Islamic Pakistan. This chapter has been conceptualised as a response to this. Listening to Indian Muslim voices helps to complicate the image of the partition refugee – the ones who migrated, the ones who didn’t, and the ones who returned. The way they narrate their memories of 1947 will also challenge India’s claims to secularism. How Ind...
This book revisits the partition of the Punjab, its attendant violence and, as a consequence, the di...
sixty years of independence from British rule. Nevertheless, the celebrations of the three nations ’...
In the wake of Partition - the break-up of British India in 1947 - millions of people moved across t...
The study aims to discover the heteroclite and cohabitation of society comprising of Sikhs, Muslims ...
The partitioning of British India in August 1947 into its principal successor state, Hindu-majority ...
Sindhi Hindus comprise the world’s most widespread South Asian diaspora. When the British divided th...
The British divided and quit India in 1947. The Partition of India and the creation of Pakistan upro...
This article relates the Indian Muslim diaspora to the events of 1947, when British India was partit...
In advocating for the Partition of India, the All-India Muslim League sought to protect the Muslims ...
This thesis explores the partition of British India into India and Pakistan. While focusing on the p...
Three assumptions have been crucial to the Hindu Right wing’s discourse in post independence India. ...
Partitioned States offers new perspective in the histories of Partition and its aftermath by connect...
During the Partition of India in August 1947, the majority of the Muslim population in and around th...
Understanding of the holocaust event, ‘Partition of Indian Subcontinent’(1947) still appears a...
The Partition of India was the process of dividing the sub-continent along sectarian lines, which to...
This book revisits the partition of the Punjab, its attendant violence and, as a consequence, the di...
sixty years of independence from British rule. Nevertheless, the celebrations of the three nations ’...
In the wake of Partition - the break-up of British India in 1947 - millions of people moved across t...
The study aims to discover the heteroclite and cohabitation of society comprising of Sikhs, Muslims ...
The partitioning of British India in August 1947 into its principal successor state, Hindu-majority ...
Sindhi Hindus comprise the world’s most widespread South Asian diaspora. When the British divided th...
The British divided and quit India in 1947. The Partition of India and the creation of Pakistan upro...
This article relates the Indian Muslim diaspora to the events of 1947, when British India was partit...
In advocating for the Partition of India, the All-India Muslim League sought to protect the Muslims ...
This thesis explores the partition of British India into India and Pakistan. While focusing on the p...
Three assumptions have been crucial to the Hindu Right wing’s discourse in post independence India. ...
Partitioned States offers new perspective in the histories of Partition and its aftermath by connect...
During the Partition of India in August 1947, the majority of the Muslim population in and around th...
Understanding of the holocaust event, ‘Partition of Indian Subcontinent’(1947) still appears a...
The Partition of India was the process of dividing the sub-continent along sectarian lines, which to...
This book revisits the partition of the Punjab, its attendant violence and, as a consequence, the di...
sixty years of independence from British rule. Nevertheless, the celebrations of the three nations ’...
In the wake of Partition - the break-up of British India in 1947 - millions of people moved across t...