Graphic novel on Partition - stories from India, Pak, B'desh

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Press Trust of India New Delhi
Last Updated : Aug 28 2013 | 1:25 PM IST
Contributors from India, Pakistan and Bangladesh have helped stitch up a melange of reflective, witty and contemporary accounts of how ordinary people negotiated with the Partition, in a new graphic novel.
Narratives by 46 contributors - journalists, graphic artists, translators and storytellers among others- feature in the anthology "This Side That Side: Restorying Partition" (Yoda Press) scheduled for release on August 30.
"The idea was to explore Partition and its effect on contemporary times through medium of comics and graphic narratives. Hence a visual perspective was critical," Vishwajyoti Ghosh, who curated the anthology says.
The book contains 28 narratives- poetry, songs, dastans, reportage- all rendered in different visual styles and forms.
"Many narratives were also translated from Hindi, Urdu, Bengali in English," Ghosh says.
The graphic narratives are presented from the point of view of various now middle-aged people, who did not witness the 1947 Partition but grew up on it.
Graphic narratives reflect how people negotiated with the epochal moment of Partition, which brought with it tremendous amount of loss, pain and despair.
A narrative titled "Tamasha-e-Tetwal", one of the many stories brought together in the anthology reads thus:
"Tetwal a village located at Line of Control (LoC). Post partition in 1947, two settlements emerge demarcating the two countries. What divides one settlement from the other is a rivulet. Despite the barriers, people still talk to one another, they are curious to know what's happening on the other side even when they may not sit together."
The anthology attempts to look beyond what has already been written about Partition since 1947, roping in both non-fiction and fiction.
It has moved further, collated more reflective, witty and contemporary accounts of Partition.
It all began when Arpita Das, publisher of Yoda Press wanted to come up with a graphical representation of Partition two-and-a-half years ago with the idea soon attaining shape when Yoda Press partnered with the Goethe Institute.
"The next task was to look for content. We knew it wouldn't be a single author initiative. Multiple stories had to be told, numerous perspectives had to be brought in. After all, these borders were man-made," Arpita recalls.
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First Published: Aug 28 2013 | 1:25 PM IST