No Woman’s Land: Women from Pakistan, India & Bangladesh Write on the Partition of India

978-81-88965-04-5

Women Unlimited, 2004

Language: English

202+vi pages

5.5"x8.5"

Price INR 375.00

An unusual mix of memoirs, interviews, reminiscences and reflective essays, No Woman's Land is the first attempt to present a women’s perspective on the Partition of India, based on experiences from Pakistan, India and Bangladesh.

INR 375.00
In stock
SKU
978-81-88965-04-5
Never before has a single volume featured non-fiction writing by women from Pakistan, India and Bangladesh on the Partition of India. Here, for the first time, are Ismat Chughtai, Sara Suleri, Anis Kidwai, Phulrenu Guha, Meghna Guhathakurta, Shehla Shibli, Manikuntala Sen, Kamlaben Patel and many others, speaking and writing about communalism and literature; what they learnt from refugees; what Partition meant to them; and how they define themselves—Hindus? Muslims? Indians? Pakistanis? Bengalis? All of these or none? Either or neither? Above all, their accounts raise that most troubling question: do women have a country? An unusual mix of memoirs, interviews, reminiscences and reflective essays, No Woman's Land is the first attempt to present women’s perspective on the Partition of India, based on the experience of three countries.

Ritu Menon

Ritu Menon co-founded Kali for Women, India’s first feminist press, in 1984, and is founder-director of Women Unlimited, an associate of KfW. She is the author of several books, among them the groundbreaking Borders & Boundaries: Women in India’s Partition; Out of Line: a literary and political biography of Nayantara Sahgal; Loitering With Intent: Diary of a Happy Traveller; and editor of a number of anthologies of prose, poetry and memoirs. ZOHRA! A Biography in Four Acts is her latest book.