Gazing at Neighbours: Travels Along the Line That Partitioned India

Author :

Bishwanath Ghosh

Publisher:

Westland Books

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Publisher

Westland Books

ISBN-13

9789360458980

ISBN-10 9360458988
Binding

Paperback

Number of Pages 356 Pages
Language (English)
Weight (grms) 257
AN INTERESTING TAKE AT THE PARTITION OF THE INDIAN SUBCONTINENT, THIS BOOK LOOKS AT THE PLACES DOTTING INDIA’S BORDERS WITH ITS NEIGHBOURS AND THE PEOPLE WHO LIVE THERE. In July 1947, British barrister Cyril Radcliffe was summoned to New Delhi and given five weeks to draw, on the map of the subcontinent, two zigzagged lines that would decide the future of one-fifth of the human race. One line, 553 kilometres long, created the province of West Punjab; the other, adding up to 4,096 kilometres, carved out a province called East Bengal. Both territories joined the newborn nation of Pakistan—an event called the Partition of India, which saw one million people being butchered and another fifteen million uprooted from their homes. Enough and more has been written about the horrors of Partition, but what of the people who actually inhabit the land through which these lines run? Curiosity leads Bishwanath Ghosh into journeying along the Radcliffe Line—through the vibrant greenery of Punjab as well as the more melancholic landscape of the states surrounding Bangladesh—and examining, first hand, life on the border. Recording his encounters and experiences in luminous prose, Gazing at Neighbours is a narrative of historical stock-taking as much as of travel.

Bishwanath Ghosh

Writer and journalist BISHWANATH GHOSH, born in Kanpur in 1970, is best known for the travelogue Chai, Chai: Travels in Places Where You Stop But Never Get Off (2009). He is also the author of Tamarind City: Where Modern India Began(2012), a portrait of Chennai, the city he made his home in 2001 and where he currently works with The Hindu as a senior deputy editor.
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