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The paper attempts to read Zulfikar Ghose’s poetry a Pakistani Diaspora poet, by applying the theoretical frame of Dialogism proposed by Mikhail Bakhtin in 1981. Although, Bakhtin sees poetry as monologic and “single-voiced” (Bakhtin, The Dialogic Imagination 434), this paper attempts to accomplish that poetry as a genre by virtue of its regional, extraterritorial, transnational and eclectic appeal harbors dialogic voices. Correspondingly, this dialogic resonance is acutely registered in postcolonial poetry because it addresses multiple perspectives and contexts thereby challenging poetry’s arguable monologic character. In this regard, Ghose’s poetry is a multi-voiced discourse that is continuously shifting, evolving, and reshaping itself, and approaching it through Bakhtin’s dialogism opens new research avenues to engage with the unexplored voices that people his poetry. Ghose’s poetic work, immersed in exilic and cross-cultural paradigms, is a befitting site for exploring dialogic propensities since Ghose writes about his roots and home from the western cosmopolitan locations. By a close reading of Ghose’s five collections of poetry, The Loss of India (1964), Jets from Orange (1967), The Violent West (1972), A Memory of Asia (1984), and 50 Poems: 30 Selected 20 New (2010), this paper establishes that postcolonial poetic discourse has germs of dialogic interactive.

Rabia Zaheer, Dr. Rizwan Akhtar. (2019) Alien Voices and Dialogic Discourse in Zulfikar Ghose’s Poetry, Journal of Research ( Humanities), Vol LV, Issue 1.
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