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Of Territorial Borders and Test Cricket: Exploring the Boundaries of the Postcolonial State
Oleh:
Scott, Bede
Jenis:
Article from Article
Dalam koleksi:
The Journal of Commonwealth Literature vol. 44 no. 1 (Mar. 2009)
,
page 23-34.
Topik:
Partition
;
Manto
;
borders
;
cricket
;
nation-state
;
Indo-Pakistani relations
Fulltext:
Of Territorial Borders and Test Cricket.pdf
(122.12KB)
Isi artikel
This article explores two notably different representations of the border that has divided India and Pakistan since Partition in 1947. I begin by discussing the Ambala Tribune’s coverage of the 1955 India-Pakistan Test cricket series. During this series, an estimated 20,000 Indians were given permission to attend the Third Test in Lahore – creating what one newspaper described as “the biggest mass migration across the frontier since Partition”. I then examine the role the same border plays in Saadat Hasan Manto’s 1953 story, “Toba Tek Singh”. Here, rather than facilitating non-coercive international movement, the border becomes a repressive mechanism of the state, a cordon sanitaire designed to prevent the “warm handshakes and cordial embraces” that would eventually take place in 1955. In this article I attempt to account for the differences between these two narratives and for the fl uctuating modalities of the border they describe. I also offer some thoughts on what such differences might tell us about Indo-Pakistani relations more generally, and about the nature of the border separating these postcolonial nation-states.
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