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Pakistani literature

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Not to be confused with literature regarding Pakistan, theBibliography of Pakistan.
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Pakistani literature (Urdu:ادبیاتِ پاکستان) is a distinct literature that gradually came to be defined after Pakistan gained nationhood status in 1947, emerging out of literary traditions of theSouth Asia.[1] The shared tradition ofUrdu literature andEnglish literature ofBritish India was inherited by the new state. Over a big time of period a body of literature unique to Pakistan has emerged in nearly all major Pakistani languages, includingUrdu,English,Punjabi,Pushto,Balochi,Sindhi, andSeraiki.[2]

There have been manybibliographies andbiographical dictionaries documenting Pakistani writers, including theAhl-i-Qalam Directory published by thePakistan Academy of Letters and often revised, in its 2010 edition including 3,500 writers but only those alive at that time.[3]

History

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The nature of Pakistani literature soon after independence aroused controversy among writers due to its being centred heavily on the negative events related to theindependence movement.[1] According toGilani Kamran (GC University), Pakistani literature was expected to take a new direction along with the new state of Pakistan at this point, but did not immediately meet this expectation.[1]

Saadat Hassan Manto (1912–1955), a prominent writer of short stories of South Asia writing mainly inUrdu, produced great literature out of the events relating to the India-Pakistan independence. His literature is considered to be progressive in its tone and spirit. According to several critics it had not only evolved its own identity but also had played a significant role in documenting the hardships and hopes of Pakistan in the latter part of the 20th century.[1]

Today, Pakistani literature has taken a shape of its own by depicting the complex class system and the common man. It also has evolved in merging Urdu literary forms and English literature leading to experimentation. Many writers of fiction borrow from English and vice versa.

Pakistani literature's main official platform is thePakistan Academy of Letters, whose work is overseen by a Board of Governors.

Digests

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Since 1960s Pakistan hadperiodicals called digests.[4] There are hundreds of such digests.[4] As some digests cater to current events, but a large number of them used to publishpulp fiction.Karachi was leading in publishing of popular pulp fiction.Ibn-e-Safi and Shakeel Adilzada ofSabrang Digest (1960s) was Pakistan's early popular pulp fiction writers.Mohiuddin Nawab ran a 33 year longSuspense Digest series called Devta until 2010. Some of the fiction digests not being adequately in tune with Pakistan's Islamist religious orthodoxy faced challenging times during General Zia times, but also had to find ways and means to bypass official & unofficial moral police at times by bribing them.[4] According to Haseeb Asif historically not only romance & sexuality but also soft erotica had always been a part Pakistani pulp fiction digests, only that some of them make it feel it guilt free by imputing something negative along natural human instincts. While government tried to interfere, one important cross road came with Television and their after digital media. Some of digest writers shifted totelevision drama script writing, same time to sustain in business print media digests rather than subscription started depending more upon advertising & spirituality business and therefore had to compromise with their sexual openness to an extent.[4] Haseeb Asif says as much predominant language of these digest is language of middle class in Pakistan society, consuming sexual content masked with imputing moral guilt on self & judge upper & lower classes too is feature of middle class. Asif further says while some of the authors of classical Urdu literature too explored human sexuality, but most times it comes as an argument to question social & patriarchal hypocrisy where as pulp fiction continue to compromise with misogyny & patriarchal values of the society.[4]

Literature by language

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Urdu Pakistani literature

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Main article:Urdu literature

Balochi

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Main article:Balochi literature

Punjabi

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Main article:Punjabi literature

Pashto

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Main article:Pashto literature and poetry

Sindhi

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Main article:Sindhi literature

Saraiki

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Main article:Saraiki literature

Kashmiri

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Main article:Kashmiri literature

Pakistani literature in other languages

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English

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Main article:Pakistani English literature

English is one of the official languages of Pakistan (Urdu, being the other) and has been established in the area since the British colonial era. The dialect of English spoken in Pakistan is known asPakistani English. English language poetry from Pakistan from the beginning held a special place in South Asian writing, notably with the work ofShahid Suhrawardy,Ahmed Ali,Alamgir Hashmi,Daud Kamal, Taufiq Rafat, andMaki Kureishi, and later of M. Athar Tahir, Waqas Ahmed Khwaja, Omer Tarin, Hina Babar Ali and others; but fiction fromPakistan began to receive recognition in the latter part of the 20th century, with the popularity of theParsi authorBapsi Sidhwa who wroteThe Crow Eaters (1978),Cracking India (1988), etc., after the earlier reputations ofAhmed Ali andZulfikar Ghose had been made in international fiction. In the diaspora,Hanif Kureishi commenced a prolific career with the novelThe Buddha of Suburbia (1990), which won theWhitbread Award, andAamer Hussein wrote a series of acclaimed short story collections.Sara Suleri published her literary memoir,Meatless Days (1989).

Pakistani English writing has had some readership in the country. From 1980sPakistani English literature began to receive national and official recognition, when thePakistan Academy of Letters included works originally written English in its annual literary awards. The first major English writer to receive this national honour wasAlamgir Hashmi. Subsequently, through the last three decades, a number of other English writers, includingBapsi Sidhwa andNadeem Aslam, have been recognized by the Academy. In the early years of the 21st century, a number of Pakistani novelists writing in English won or were shortlisted for international awards.Mohsin Hamid published his first novelMoth Smoke (2000), which won the Betty Trask Award and was a finalist for the PEN/Hemingway Award; he has since published his second novel,The Reluctant Fundamentalist (2007), which was shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize. British-Pakistani writerNadeem Aslam won theKiriyama Prize for his second book,Maps for Lost Lovers (2004). The first novel ofMohammed Hanif,A Case of Exploding Mangoes (2008) was shortlisted for the 2008Guardian First Book Award.[5] Emerging authorsKamila Shamsie andDaniyal Mueenuddin have garnered wide attention.[6]

Persian

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Main article:Persian and Urdu

During the early Muslim period, foreignPersian language became the lingua franca of South Asia, adopted and used by most of the educated and the government. Urdu, Pakistan's national language and lingua franca, draws heavy influences from thePersian language (seePersian and Urdu). AlthoughPersian literature fromPersia itself was popular, several figures in South Asia, and later Pakistan, became major poets in Persian, the most notable beingAllama Iqbal. For a time, Persian remained the court language of theMughals, soon to be replaced by Urdu and English. Persian still held its status, despite the spread of Urdu, well into the early years of theBritish rule in South Asia.

Examples

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See also

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References

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  1. ^abcdPakistan Literature: Evolution & trendsArchived 2006-03-24 at theWayback Machine, Gilani Kamran, 2004.
  2. ^"Prolegomena to the Study of Pakistani English and Pakistani Literature in English" (1989),Alamgir Hashmi,Pakistani Literature (Islamabad), 2:1 1993.
  3. ^Parekh, Rauf (1 July 2024)."Literary Notes: Biographical dictionaries and obituaries in Urdu".Dawn News. Archived fromthe original on 10 November 2024.The 2010 edition includes only the living authors and lists about 3,500 of them.
  4. ^abcdeAsif, Haseeb (2015-07-06)."Read pray love: Inside the enigmatic world of Urdu digests".Herald Magazine. Retrieved2020-04-12.
  5. ^Higgins, Charlotte (31 October 2008)."Five of the best in line for the Guardian first book award".The Guardian. Retrieved2009-03-15.
  6. ^"Pakistani Authors Catch Literary World's Attention", Rob Gifford,Morning Edition,NPR, May 29, 2009

Further reading

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External links

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