Poetry as resistance : islam and ethnicity in postcolonial pakistan / Nukhbah Taj Langah.

By: Langah, Nukhbah TajMaterial type: TextTextPublisher: [S.l.] : Routledge India, 2012Edition: 1st edDescription: 296 p. ; 23 cmISBN: 0415501466 (hardcover); 9780415501460 (hardcover)Subject(s): Ethnicity--Religious aspects--Islam | Islam and literature | Language and languages--Political aspects | Pakistan | Siraiki (South Asian people) | Siraiki poetryDDC classification: 891.41 LOC classification: PK2892.5Online resources: Amazon.com Summary: Focusing on the culturally and historically rich Siraiki-speaking region, often tagged as ‘South Punjab’, this book discusses the ways in which Siraiki creative writers have transformed into political activists, resisting the self-imposed domination of the Punjabi– Mohajir ruling elite. Influenced by Sufi poets, their poetry takes the shape of both protest and dialogue. This book reflects upon the politics of identity and the political complications which are a result of colonisation and later, neo-colonisation of Pakistan. It challenges the philosophy of Pakistan — a state created for Muslims — which is now taking the shape of religious fanaticism, while disregarding ethnic and linguistic issues such as that of Siraiki.
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Book Book Central Library (CL)
Central Library (CL)
NFIC General Stacks 891.41 LAN 2012 (Browse shelf) Available CIPS0000117
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Focusing on the culturally and historically rich Siraiki-speaking region, often tagged as ‘South Punjab’, this book discusses the ways in which Siraiki creative writers have transformed into political activists, resisting the self-imposed domination of the Punjabi– Mohajir ruling elite. Influenced by Sufi poets, their poetry takes the shape of both protest and dialogue. This book reflects upon the politics of identity and the political complications which are a result of colonisation and later, neo-colonisation of Pakistan. It challenges the philosophy of Pakistan — a state created for Muslims — which is now taking the shape of religious fanaticism, while disregarding ethnic and linguistic issues such as that of Siraiki.

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