Pain, Agony, and Trauma in the Characters of ‘Toba Tek Singh’ and ‘This Blinding Absence of Light’

Authors

  • Mohammad Osman Abdul Wahab King Khalid University
  • Nisar Ahmad Koka King Khalid University
  • Mohammad Nurul Islam King Khalid University
  • Syed Mohammad Khurshid Anwar King Khalid University
  • Javed Ahmad King Khalid University
  • Mohsin Raza Khan King Khalid University
  • Fozia Zulfiquar King Khalid University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.17507/tpls.1309.10

Keywords:

pain, agony, partition, delirium, dementia

Abstract

‘Toba Tek Singh’ is an Urdu Short story written by Saadat Hassan Manto and ‘This Blinding Absence of Light’ is a French Novel Written by Taher Ben Jelloun. ‘Toba Tek Singh’ was perhaps written in 1954 and published in 1955 whereas ‘This Blinding Absence of Light’ was written in 2001. There is more than four decades span between both works of literature. ‘Toba Tek Singh’ is pure fiction but ‘This Blinding Absence of Light’ is although a novel but based on a true story or narration of a prisoner who spent eighteen years of his life in one of the worst prisons of the documented history. ‘Toba Tek Singh’ is written in the third person whereas ‘This Blinding Absence of Light’ is narrated in the first person. This research will be referring here to a 2002 translation of ‘This Blinding Absence of Light’ by Linda Coverdale in English. ‘Toba Tek Singh’ is a fictitious character who is a patient in a lunatic asylum. Before suffering from the mental illness ‘Toba Tek Singh’ was a landlord and during the partition of India, his village and his lands go to a Muslim majority country i.e., Pakistan. This research intends to study the effects of the pain, agony, and trauma on the psyche of the characters here.

Author Biographies

Mohammad Osman Abdul Wahab, King Khalid University

Department of English, Faculty of Languages and Translation

Nisar Ahmad Koka, King Khalid University

Department of English, Faculty of Languages and Translation

Mohammad Nurul Islam, King Khalid University

Department of English, Faculty of Languages and Translation

Syed Mohammad Khurshid Anwar, King Khalid University

Applied College, Mahala, Khamis Mushait

Javed Ahmad, King Khalid University

English Language Center (ELC) Graiger, Faculty of Languages and Translation

Mohsin Raza Khan, King Khalid University

Department of English, Faculty of Languages and Translation

Fozia Zulfiquar, King Khalid University

Department of English, Applied College for Girls Abha

References

Ashraf, K. (2010). Barre Saghir Mein Urdu Afsana [Urdu Shorty Story in the sub-continent]. Modern Publishing House, Darya Ganj, Delhi, India

Manto, S. H. (April, 2017). Manto ke sau afsaane [Hundred Short Stories of Manto]. Chaudhary Academy Lahore, Pakistan

Dalrymple, W. (2019). The Anarchy, Bloomsbury Publishing, London, UK

Flemming, L. (1985). The Life and Works of Saadat Hasan Manto, VBL Publications, Darya Ganj, Delhi, India

Saint, T. (1995). The Long Shadow of Manto’s Partition Narratives: ‘Fictive’ Testimony to Historical Trauma”. Social Scientist

Jelloun, T. B. (2001). This Blinding Absence of Light, Translated from the French by Linda Coverdale, The New Press, New York, London, UK

Manto, S. H. (2008). Toba Tek Singh: Stories, Penguin Books India, Gurgaon, Delhi, India

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Published

2023-09-01

Issue

Section

Articles