Memories of Partition: Revisiting Saadat Hasan Manto

Author(s): 
Sudha Twari
Publisher/Sponsor: 
Economic and Political Weekly Vol. 48, No. 25 (JUNE 22, 2013), pp. 50-58 (9 pages)
www.jstor.org/stable/23527974

The Economic Consequences of Partition: India and Pakistan

Author(s): 
Wayne Wilox
Publisher/Sponsor: 
Journal of International Affairs Vol. 18, No. 2, The Politics of Partition (1964), pp. 188-197 (10 pages)
www.jstor.org/stable/24363272

Colonial Infrastructure and the Politics of Partition of Punjab

Author(s): 
Mubbashir Rizvi
Publisher/Sponsor: 
Studies in Global Asias University of Minnesota Press Volume 6, Issue 2, Fall 2020
muse.jhu.edu/article/807284

34 Field Trip Larkin, Brian. 2018. “Promising Forms: The Political Aesthetics of Infrastructure .” In The Promise of Infrastructure, edited by Hannah Appel, Nikhil Anand, and Akhil Gupta, 175–­ 202. Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press. Perlez, Jane, and Yufan Huang. 2016. “China Promoting Tourism for Disputed Paracel Islands.” New York Times, May 8. https://www.nytimes .com/2016/05/29/world/asia/south-china-sea-tourism.html. Roberts, Brian Russel, and Michelle Ann Stephens, eds. 2017. Archipelagic American Studies. Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press.

Partition Narratives

Author(s): 
Mushurul Hasan
Publisher/Sponsor: 
Oriente Moderno Nuova serie, Anno 23 (84), Nr. 1, ISLAM IN SOUTH ASIA (2004), pp. 103-130 (28 pages) Istituto per l'Oriente C. A. Nallino
www.jstor.org/stable/25817920

Remembering partition: women, oral histories and the Partition of 1947

Author(s): 
Pippa Virdee
Publisher/Sponsor: 
Oral History Vol. 41, No. 2, CONFLICT (AUTUMN 2013), pp. 49-62 (14 pages) Oral History Society
www.jstor.org/stable/23610424

This article explores key developments in the way Partition has been represented in the history of India and Pakistan. It more specifically examines how alternative silent voices have been become more visible in the past fifteen years in the historiography of Partition. This shift has been made possible with the use of oral testimonies to document accounts of ordinary people's experiences of this event in the history of India and Pakistan.

The Demographic Impact of Partition in the Punjab in 1947

Author(s): 
K. Hill
W. Selzer
J. Leaning
S. J. Malik
S. S. Russell
Publisher/Sponsor: 
Population Studies Vol. 62, No. 2 (Jul., 2008), pp. 155-170 (16 pages) Taylor and Francis, Ltd.
www.jstor.org/stable/27643460

Sikhs and the Partition of the Punjab

Author(s): 
Shiv Kumar Gupta
Publisher/Sponsor: 
Proceedings of the Indian History Congress Vol. 58 (1997), pp. 591-598 (8 pages) Indian History Congress
www.jstor.org/stable/44143965

Insanity and then hope

Author(s): 
Adnan Adil
Publisher/Sponsor: 
Academi of the Punjab in North America
apnaorg.com/articles/ishtiaq-13/?msclkid=9f49484acf1211eca8665e6653d66636

Partition and Punjabi Novel

Author(s): 
Chaman Lal
Publisher/Sponsor: 
Conference: Partition in South Asia, JNU, New Delhi
www.researchgate.net/publication/280309287_Partition_and_Punjabi_Novel?msclkid=9f492e3dcf1211ecaadad6f869a6c986

Conceptions of Citizenship in India and the 'Muslim Question'

Author(s): 
Ornit Shani
Publisher/Sponsor: 
Modern Asian Studies, Cambridge University Press
www.jstor.org/stable/27764650

This paper explores the development of multiple conceptions of citizenship in India in an attempt to understand how, despite profound social divisions, India's nationhood holds together. The paper advances the proposition that the Indian polity incorporated a deeply divided and conflict-ridden population by offering multiple notions of citizenship upon which a sense of membership in the nation, and a share in the enterprise of the state, could be sought.

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