
International Journal For Multidisciplinary Research
E-ISSN: 2582-2160
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Volume 7 Issue 2
March-April 2025
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Identity of Memory and Nostalgia in Narratives of Indian Partition
Author(s) | Dr. Devender Singh |
---|---|
Country | India |
Abstract | The Partition of India in 1947 was a watershed and traumatic experience in South Asian history, reshaping boundaries, identities, and communal relations. Beyond political and geographic compulsions, Partition left indelible scars on the personal and collective psyche, as poignantly recorded by its vast corpus of testimonies. These testimonies embracing literature and oral testimony, as well as cinema—are archives of memory and nostalgia, evoking the titanic human cost of displacement, violence, and loss. It explores how both these entanglements of memory and nostalgia within Partition fiction are a "shaper of identity" and a "preserver of cultural continuity." Memory not only builds the past but tries to make it meaningful in the here and now as well. Fragmented and personal, memory keeps alive the salience of Partition, while collective memories provide public intelligibility, mediating both changing socio-political environments and changing the nature of the past concerning time. Nostalgia, by contrast, is a testimony to the desire for a lost homeland and a pre-Partition world, which is usually fantasized as a utopian space of cooperation and cohabitation. With literary fiction like Saadat Hasan Manto's Toba Tek Singh and Bapsi Sidhwa's Ice-Candy Man, oral histories, and memoirs, this study investigates how Partition narratives can act as a mediator between trauma, displacement, and identity formation. This also investigates the politics of memory and nostalgia through the analysis of how these words have been utilized to construct or deconstruct nationalistic ideologies. This essay seeks to bring to the fore the means through which Partition stories can be preserved as static sites of understanding complexities entwined through remembrance, sentimentalism, and identity. This essay seeks to bring to the fore conflicts of subaltern others-women, refugees, and diaspora others-in which, emphasizes their chronological deservingness as testimonial histories and recuperation as conciliation procedures under the canopy of living through cultural and political differences. |
Keywords | Nostalgia in Literature, Partition Narratives, Cultural Trauma, Post-colonialism |
Field | Arts |
Published In | Volume 7, Issue 2, March-April 2025 |
Published On | 2025-03-05 |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.36948/ijfmr.2025.v07i02.38254 |
Short DOI | https://doi.org/g87cxs |
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E-ISSN 2582-2160

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IJFMR DOI prefix is
10.36948/ijfmr
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