Partition

Representing partition in the UK: an archive, an exhibition and a classroom

Author(s): 
K.M. Greenbank
Publisher/Sponsor: 
India Review
www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/14736489.2021.1993711

In 2005 Rev. Michael Roden, the vicar at Church of England church of St Mary’s in Hitchin (a small town about 30 miles north of London) was invited to India to give a series of sermons to Indian Church of England congregations. He was struck during his visit by the scars in Indian society that he thought were the remnants of Partition’s aftermath. His visit set him thinking about the ways in which Partition has shaped British as well as Indian and Pakistani society, and about how little people in the UK know about the calamitous results of British policy at the time of decolonization.

A Divided Legacy: The Partition in Selected Novels of India, Pakistan and Bangladesh

Niaz Zaman
Manohar Publishers and Distributors
2000

Bihar Muslims response to two nation theory 1940_47

Sajjad, Mohammad
Aligarh Muslim University
2003

The theme of partition in Indian literature in English with special reference to fiction

Gundur, N S
Karnatak University
2004

Filming the line: a comparative study of selected partition narratives and their filmic renditions

Laroia, Deepti
Jawaharlal Nehru University
2008

Partition of the Indian armed forces between India and Pakistan

Singh, Sharmila
Jawaharlal Nehru University
1994

Violence Trauma and Loss

Singh, Jasbir
Guru Nanak Dev University
2010

The theme of partition in selected English novels of the subcontinent

Ray, Rituparna
University of Calcutta
2007

Post partition rehabilitation social economic and political perspectives a case study of Delhi

Sharma, Shruti
Panjab University
2005

The novels on the Indian partition

More, D R
Shivaji University
1991

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