1947 Partition in The East

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Anandabazar Patrika
Bengal Borderland
Bengal Partition
Bengali Refugees
borderland studies
Burdwan Division
Category=NHF
Category=NHTB
Central Government
CHT.
Common Language
communal violence
displacement trauma research
East Bengal
East Pakistan
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Hindu Refugees
Homogeneous Empty Time
identity politics South Asia
Khas Lands
Komal Gandhar
Liberation War
Midas Touch
migration narratives
postcolonial citizenship
Rajshahi District
Rajshahi Division
refugee rehabilitation
River Gorai
UN
Urdu Speakers
Vice Versa
West Bengal

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138062375
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 29 Dec 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book explores the experiences of people affected by the Partition of British India and princely states in 1947 through first-person accounts, memoirs, archival material, literature, and cinema. It focuses on the displacement, violence and trauma of the people affected and interrogates the interrelationships between nationalism, temporality, religion, and citizenship.

The authors examine the mass migrations triggered by the 1947 Partition, amidst nationalist posturing, religious violence, and debates on crucial issues of refugee rehabilitation and redistribution of land and resources. It focuses on the drawing of the borders and the ruptures in the socio-cultural bonds within regions and communities brought on by demographic changes, violence, and displacement. The volume reflects on the significant mark left by the event on the socio-political sensibilities of various communities, and the questions of identity and citizenship. It also studies the effects of Partition on the politics of Bangladesh and India’s east and northeast states, specifically Bengal, Assam and Tripura.

A significant addition to the existing corpus on Partition historiography, this book will be of interest to modern Indian history, partition studies, border studies, sociology, refugee and migration studies, cultural studies, literature, post-colonial studies and South Asian studies, particularly those concerned with Bengal, Northeast India and Bangladesh.

Subhasri Ghosh received her PhD in Modern History from Jawaharlal Nehru University. After a two year stint as a post-doctoral fellow at Rabindranath Tagore Centre for Human Development Studies, she is at present engaged as Assistant Professor in the Department of History at Asutosh College, affiliated to the University of Calcutta. Her research interests include exploring the interface of gender, migration, colonial and post-colonial society.