Articles

Published: 28 July, 2024
Source: The News on Sunday

From Delhi to Lucknow

Why did Don Quixote, a 17th-Century Spanish novel, gain such popularity in the 19th-Century Lucknow? Was its allure linked to its European origins—an object of desire at the time—or was there deeper cultural resonance between the 19th-Century Lucknow and the 17th-Century Spain?

The fact is that despite the vast differences in their cultures the late 19th-Century Lucknow and the world depicted in Don Quixote shared several traits, such as wit, humour, satire, ostentation and elegance.

Published: 11 February, 2024
Source: The News on Sunday

Linguistic identities

Exploring the multifaceted journey of Sindh through Rana Mehboob Akhtar’s narrative

Published: 06 August, 2023
Source: The News on Sunday

The journey of ideas

Unravelling the impact of travelling theories on cultures and literature

Published: 06 August, 2023
Source: Dawn

Streets with no names

Asghar Nadeem Syed’s newest novel blurs fact and fiction in musing over the lost years of Gen Zia’s dictatorship

Published: 16 April, 2023
Source: Dawn

The god of poetry

Commemorating Mir Taqi Mir, the undisputed master of Rekhta, in the 300th year of his birth

Published: 19 February, 2023
Source: Dawn

The poet of love

Amjad Islam Amjad, who passed away February 10, was, in the jargon of mushaira organisers, a ‘crowd-puller’. His immense popularity, especially with youngsters, hinged on how he focused on the theme of love

Next