Lucknow of Faiz Ahmed 'Faiz'

Think India ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Atul Tiwari

Honourable Guests! This gathering will mark a memorable date in the history of our literature. In our conferences and colloquiums, we have been mostly arguing about the language and its spread/power. So much so, that the intention of early Hindi and Urdu Literature - which is present - was not to impact our thoughts and emotions, but to make a perfect linguistic construct.

2020 ◽  
pp. 344-470
Author(s):  
Gopi Chand Narang

This chapter opens with a conceptual history of literary movements like modernism and postmodernism in Europe, and goes on to discuss the origins of these trends in Urdu literature, particularly Urdu poetry, about which much has not been written before. This chapter also contains samples of representative ghazal verses from a wide variety of modern and postmodern poets, including Javed Akhtar and Gulzar.


1996 ◽  
Vol 30 (2) ◽  
pp. 447-467 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shabana Mahmud

The book Angāre, a collection of ten short stories by Sajjād Ẓahīr, Rashīd Jahān, Aḥmed 'Alī and Maḥmūduzẓafar published in Lucknow in December 1932, marks a major turning point in the history of Urdu literature. Acting as a powerful catalyst, it initiated a major change in the form and content of Urdu literature and helped to lay the basis for the establishment of the Progressive Writers Association, the most significant Urdu literary movement of the twentieth century.


2019 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 78-94
Author(s):  
L. A. Vasilyeva

The paper focuses on the Indo-Mauritian Muslim Community, which plays an important role in the social and political life of the island state. The paper deals with the revival of the Urdu language spoken by the Indo-Mauritian Muslims who had almost lost the “ancestral tongue” in the process of adaptation to the Mauritius` multi-ethnic and multi- religious society through the eighteenth – nineteenth century. The study reconstructs a brief history of the Urdu-speaking Indian Muslims` migration to Mauritius and their partial assimilation with the local society. The Muslim migrants accepted the local Creole language and some elements of their culture but remained loyal to their religion and traditional Muslim values. The author makes a special emphasis upon the means of revival and development of Urdu language and the formation of the Mauritian Urdu Literature. The Urdu language today is a tool of self-identification of Indo-Mauritian Muslims and primary marker of their religious identity as well.


Books Abroad ◽  
1966 ◽  
Vol 40 (1) ◽  
pp. 111
Author(s):  
C. M. Naim ◽  
Muhammad Sadiq
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
عبد الرزاق بلعباس

 يتناول هذا البحث نشأة مصطلح الاقتصاد السياسي في العالم الإسلامي، ومقارنته في الأدبيات العربية والتركية والأردية، وعلاقته بالمصطلح الفرنسي économie politique، والمصطلح الإنجليزي political economy، مع تجاوز الإشارة إلى واضع المصطلح، ومسألة المناسبة في اختيار التسمية بين اللفظ المترجم والمصطلح الأصلي. فالمقصود الرئيس للبحث يتعلَّق بالعملية الإدراكية التي ولَّدت المصطلح: هل تأخذ منحى البناء على ما هو موجود أم تعلن القطيعة معه؟ وعلى هذا، يجب تسليط الضوء على مسألة تطوُّر الكتابة من منظور الحياة المعيشية الواقعية في المجتمعات المسلمة؛ ما يُحتِّم الانتقال من دراسة تاريخ الفكر الاقتصادي الإسلامي إلى دراسة تاريخ الفكر الاقتصادي في هذه المجتمعات. This study deals with the origin of the concept of ‘political economy’ in the Muslim world through a comparison between Arabic, Turkish and Urdu literature. The study found that the concept entered the Muslim world through the translation of the French term ‘économie politique’ and the English term ‘political economy’. The study recommends going beyond the concern of who introduced first the concept, and the suitability of the translated or original terms. The central issue is the cognitive process that has generated the concept; whether adopting a constructive approach to what exists or to break with it. The study recommends shedding light on the evolution of writings on the economic life in Muslim societies and calls for a transition from the study of the history of economic thought in Islam to the history of economic thought in Muslim societies.


Author(s):  
Mr. Nadeem Hasan

The word Eham means to use words in poetry bearing dual meanings. The first meaning is more common and apprehensible, while the second specific and inapprehensible. The poet uses the word with its inapprehensible meaning. In the history of Urdu literature, Eham Goi became a literary movement in the early eighteenth century due to the political circumstances of that era. In this research paper, the scholar has shed light on the art of Eham and the poets who used Eham in their poetry.


1985 ◽  
Vol 58 (3) ◽  
pp. 551
Author(s):  
Alamgir Hashmi ◽  
Muhammad Sadiq
Keyword(s):  

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