Dr. nasreen banu jamadar (original) (raw)
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QUEST FOR LIBERATION OF THE SELF IN TASLIMA NASRIN'S NOVEL LAJJA
Taslima Narsin is a secular humanist who writes for freedom, equality and human rights. She gains global fame with the novel Lajja. It is one of the most controversial literary works in Southeast Asian Literature. Lajja is a barbarous indictment of religious extremism and man's brutality to man. Narsin has opposed to the oppression of minority Hindus in Islamic society of Bangladesh. Suranjan, the protagonist, and his father Sudhamoy are secular, nationalist, atheist, and a mix of optimism and idealism who believe that their motherland will not let them down. They are in constant search and in an attempt to assert their autonomy in the social and intellectual world. They faces dilemmas, pulls and pressures of their own emotional world and makes continuous effort for self-discovery and liberation of the self. Lajja is written on the incident of Babri Masjid demolition by Hindu Fundamentalists at Ayodhya, aftermath turmoil fallout is most acutely in Bangladesh, where Muslim Fundamentalists mobs begin to search and attack minority Hindus. Sudhamoy's secular and nationalist world begins to fall apart. His firm determination and trust of motherland breaks down. Suranjan and his family wants to live like a Bangladeshi but the majority Muslims bounds them to live as well as die like a Hindu. There is no recognition for them. They are like slaves and their presence is insignificant, unwanted and worthless. The protagonist Suranjan and his parents leave Bangladesh in a search of liberation of the self. Key Words
SEVERAL SCRIPTS, SEVERAL SCRIBES: THE (UN)MAKING OF TASLIMA NASREEN
Women's Link , 2018
"Several Scripts, Several Scribes: The (Un)Making of Taslima Nasreen" has been published by Sarojini Naidu Centre for Women's Studies, Jamia Millia Islamia, New Delhi in their journal "Women's Link" Vol.25, No.2 , April-June 2018 Issue. ISSN 2229-6409
Cyber Publication House, 2014
Cyber Literature, a bi-annual journal of English studies. This issue comprises of eleven research papers which cover different topics and concepts of English Literature. There is also a couple of poems namely Monsoon Blues & Durga by Sanjukta Dasgupta and Beware Man ! Beware by Mandal Bijoy Beg. The last section of this issue includes ten book reviews.
Women writers are defined through male eyes and scrutinized with the scales of patriarchal creed. This paper aims at an articulation of woman writer's protest in the socio-religious ethos of patriarchal system. It attempts a review of Taslima Nasreen's writings with a perspective not bound to ideology of feminism, socialism or any ism. It has a humanist and to some extent individualist standpoint.
Caged Bodies, Raging Minds, Dissident Voices: Alexandr Solzhenitsyn and Taslima Nasreen
IAFOR JOURNAL OF ARTS AND HUMANITIES: VOLUME 8, ISSUE 1, 2021
This paper aims to analyse the mental state of Taslima Nasreen and Alexandr Solzhenitsyn, writers that are primarily celebrated for their rich casket of fictional narratives, through poems written at a juncture in their lives when they were dealing with the pain of separation and displacement from home and country. As a consequence of defying their respective governments through their revolutionary writings, such a separation is accompanied by the loss of a stable identity. Although they do not share the socio-political context that resulted in exile, the commonly felt strains and fissures of exile have guided their perspectives through particularly intimate landscapes, so that it is possible to describe their poems' meaning in a wholly decontextualised manner. They both are, in a way, separated from conventional contexts: exile is an alienating experience, and home, no longer homelike, is perhaps an even more estranging place.
Nasrin Gone Global: A Critique of Taslima Nasrin’s Criticism of Islam and Her Feminist Strategy
Taslima Nasrin’s writings, which are extremely critical of Islam, have sparked controversy over the contents of her feminist work and strategy. Although many dismiss these writings as an anti-Islamic provocation, her ideas are well-received in the West, where she is celebrated as a feminist rebel who defies the supposedly suffocating Bangladeshi Islamic patriarchy. Unlike earlier Islamic feminists, especially Rokeya Sakhawat Hossain, who re-examined Islamic teachings in the light of locally prevalent gender discrimination, Nasrin directs her attacks against religion itself, putting almost the entire blame of gender injustice on it. In light of Rokeya’s work and strategy, and current struggles in Bangladesh to fine-tune the nation’s vision, the present article critically analyses Nasrin’s overly negative views of Islam and assesses the validity and efficacy of her feminist approach in Bangladesh society.
Diasporic Consciousness as Reflected in the Novels of Salman Rushdie & Bapsi Sidhwa
Recently, there has been an outcome of many issues related with political and social cause with literature, diaspora is one such topic which has seen abundance of writings all around the world. Diaspora has been derived from the Greek word diaspor`a that means ‘dispersion’. South Asia, known as Third world by the Western countries has seen a large scale of migration of peopleto U.S.A., U.K., Germany, France or other European countries for the sake of professional, economical or academic purposes. Since literature is the only medium of the expression of a person’s experiences, there has been an abundance of diasporic literature in the past few years. Salman Rushdie, the Indo British novelist and the winner of Booker Prize has aptly penned the ache of migration, that of the loss of country, language and culture. Rushdie’s stories inform the readers about the difficulties of coming into terms with a foreign culture. Pakistan born novelist Bapsi Sidhwa, who later moved to US is the writers of five good novels. She concentrates on the cultural difference between two countries in her novels. In my paper, I am trying to highlight the diasporic consciousness in the novels of these two internationally acclaimed novelists.