Abstract
This article explores how changing cityscapes of (post)colonial urban
transition contribute to the creation of nostalgic longing in Twilight in Delhi and Sunlight on a Broken Column.
Drawing from recent scholarship, it focuses on the memorialization of
space and compares the ways in which narrative memory frames the
perception of urbanization in both texts. Further, this study also
examines the cultural location of this nostalgia and articulates the
categorization of a specific Muslim nostalgia, which comes from the
recognition of the anticipated political and social exclusion of the
community in contemporary India. The article analyses the impact of the
transformation of the city with colonization and decolonization on
Muslims, as narrated in both texts. Borrowing from Svetlana Boym’s twin
concepts of reflective and restorative nostalgia as analytical
frameworks, a close reading reveals significantly contrasting literary
perspectives when it comes to narrating the flux between modernity and
tradition within the Indo Muslim imagination.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 839-853 |
Number of pages | 15 |
Journal | Journal of Postcolonial Writing |
Volume | 58 |
Issue number | 6 |
Early online date | 14 Nov 2022 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 1 Dec 2022 |
Keywords
- Ahmed Ali
- Attia Hosain
- Sunlight on a Broken Column
- Twilight in Delhi
- Nostalgia
- Svetlana Boym