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The discourse of history plays a pivotal role in building anticolonial narratives. For the Muslims in Indian subcontinent, this discourse is fraught with contradictions and fissures, both at temporal and spatial levels. The arrival of Muslim colonizers in India dates back to A.D. 712. And the converted Muslims after A.D. 712 find it problematic to define the spatial and temporal boundaries of their history. As native Indians, their history, rooted in Indian soil/space, begins with Asoka and Chandragupta Murya. And as Muslims, they find closer affinity with Muslim invaders. Thus the specific time period i.e. A.D. 712 becomes a site of contestation/intersection between the temporal and spatial versions of history/ies. In this paper, I intend to analyse how the protagonists, Mir Nihal in Twilight in Delhi and Sughra in The Heart Divided imagine their history/ies during the era of colonization. Mir Nihal is proud of his Muslim identity which he finds embodied in the spatial metaphor of the city, Delhi. But the city is not related only to the Muslim rulers. Its old name is Hastinapur and its glory dates back to the classical age of Mahabharata, Asoka and Chandragupta Murya. Contrary to this nationalist imaginary, Sughra, in The Heart Divided, feels proud of the temporal history that dates back to A.D. 712. As a favourite of her grandfather, she had heard many stories about the Muslim history beginning from the time of caliphates. Thus both the protagonists build their anticolonial imagination on different versions of spatio-temporal history/ies. I would like to explore the politics of de/ privileging one version of history/ies over the other. And how the state of Pakistan is struggling to locate the points of intersection in the postcolonial religio-nationalist imaginary.

Khurshid Alam. (2018) Periodizing the National History/ies: A Comparative Study of Ahmed Ali’s Twilight in Delhi and Mumtaz Shahnawaz’s The Heart Divided., Journal of the Research Society of Pakistan, Volume 55, Issue 2.
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