An edition of The wounded land (2010)

The wounded land

peoples, politics, culture, literature, liberation war, war crimes, and militancy in Bangladesh

  • 0 Ratings
  • 1 Want to read
  • 0 Currently reading
  • 0 Have read
Not in Library

My Reading Lists:

Create a new list

Check-In

×Close
Add an optional check-in date. Check-in dates are used to track yearly reading goals.
Today

  • 0 Ratings
  • 1 Want to read
  • 0 Currently reading
  • 0 Have read

Buy this book

Last edited by MARC Bot
August 27, 2024 | History
An edition of The wounded land (2010)

The wounded land

peoples, politics, culture, literature, liberation war, war crimes, and militancy in Bangladesh

  • 0 Ratings
  • 1 Want to read
  • 0 Currently reading
  • 0 Have read

The book is a compendium of articles and columns which cover a wide variety of pressing themes mostly in context of contemporary Bangladesh. The subjects, among others, include unique single-topic issues like Language Movement and the Liberation War, global cutting-edge concerns like terrorism, religious militancy, and war crimes and crucial national events and pressing trends like the post- liberation political transitions and tensions, the rule of Alliance and Great Alliance Governments, Caretaker hegemony, Army interventions, recession, price- hike etc. The book has been written in excellent English. The readers can savour it with obvious literary relish, and finally be left with a sense of living history.

Publish Date
Publisher
Pathak Shamabesh
Language
English
Pages
133

Buy this book

Edition Availability
Cover of: The wounded land

Add another edition?

Book Details


Table of Contents

A review of--The Wounded Land--
The intriguing title of Rashid Askari’s book "The Wounded Land" hits one’s eyes as a shooting star, a dart hitting the bull’s eye. It readily discharges an air of sadness, a bit like Shamsur Rahman’s Dukhini Barnamala (Poor Alphabet!). It makes us pry into what our poor motherland finds deeply wounding even more than four decades after her liberation in 1971. The author has put us on top of heaps of the injuries we have faced and are being faced with, though we are an independent nation.
Beyond any doubt, Rashid Askari by now has positioned himself as an author of outstanding merit. Among the Bangladeshi writers after mid nineties, he is easily on a par with the major ones who gained identical and impressive mastery over both Bangla and English. When it comes to matters relating to the emergence of Independent Bangladesh, Dr. Askari seems to be as veritably iconoclastic as Dr. Muhammad Zafar Iqbal on Prozac. He is one of those who were born in what was then East Pakistan amidst the country’s turbulent history in the mid sixties, and grew up in Bangladesh with a murky memory of the war and the days that went awry after Bangladesh won its freedom. His dispassionate approach (although the author has been modest enough to diagnose his discourse as pregnant with emotion, the text advocates otherwise) to dealing with pressing national and global concerns like dogmatism, political intolerance, religious militancy, terrorism and the like is the outcome of a marriage between his passion for freedom and a quest for finding the spirit embedded in opaque memoirs of the Liberation War of 1971 and the disappointment, heartbreak and betrayal amidst incidents that followed via certain acerbic assessments of the present and a vast reading of the past.
This book is an amalgam of the many essays which Professor Askari wrote in a time frame spanning over a decade. What then should we consider as a spine that clasps these ribs made out of multiple subject matters? This reviewer would recommend his love for people of the land, which plunks him on such a plane where he feels called upon to come up with such a book. If the latent messages in his essays are all synthesized and poured down through a prism then at the focal point of the beam we will find the dream of a nation such as the one envisaged by Gabriel Garcia Marquez in One Hundred Years of Solitude, a vision of a group of people living in a landmass free from all social, theological, and political bias. Dr. Askari’s greatness of writing is this: that he could cross the Bangladeshi boundary line by merit of what we may call negative capability. The topics he has touched on are homemade, yet the implications, the inherent issues, the very nature of the mode of action and the thought processes that formulate them, as he demonstrates, are continental.
The Wounded Land, aka bleeding Bangladesh, in this writer’s opinion, is like a cow over-milked and under-fed for centuries while its innocent inhabitants, personified by the calf, has remained devoid of rightful claims. This skinny cow is now left with little flesh and a saggy hide, which is what the enemies, the author and we live with, are after. As the author has advised, these adversaries appear in multitudes in many colours and shapes with a solo mindset (in his language): dissect the cow, domesticate the calf. Orbits of all isms? Terrorism, fanaticism and anti-secularism, which revolve around a single core, International Consumerism, the heart of all darkness, which the author has ubiquitously hinted at in page after page throughout the book. There is a postcolonial undertone in the author’s approach by way of debunking the ugly face of the petty-colonial power in the saddle after 1947 and awakening his people to the realization of their own legacy as well. The book is an eye-opener.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The review is written by Muhammad Alamgir Toimoor, Associate Professor and Head of the Department of English, Shah Jalal University of Science & Technology, Sylhet, Bangladesh.

Edition Notes

Includes index.

Published in
Dhaka

Classifications

Library of Congress
DS395.5 .A85 2010, MLCS 2011/01821 (P), PR9420.9.T58, PR9420.9.T75 M97 2011, PR9420.9.T75

The Physical Object

Format
Hardcover
Pagination
133 p. ;
Number of pages
133
Dimensions
8.5 x 5.5 x 1 inches
Weight
350 grams

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL24854502M
ISBN 13
9789848866191
LCCN
2011321300, 2011321298
OCLC/WorldCat
708243894, 708243896

Community Reviews (0)

Feedback?
No community reviews have been submitted for this work.

Lists

This work does not appear on any lists.

History

Download catalog record: RDF / JSON
August 27, 2024 Edited by MARC Bot import existing book
October 17, 2020 Edited by MARC Bot import existing book
July 26, 2011 Created by LC Bot import new book