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Beschreibung
Manto Ke Hashiye presents Saadat Hasan Manto at his most fearless: a writer who brought sexuality, prostitution, desire, violence, humiliation, and social hypocrisy into Urdu fiction without disguising the ugliness of the world around him.

At the center of this Urdu collection are the stories around which accusations, censorship, and legal proceedings for obscenity arose: "Dhuan," "Bu," "Kali Shalwar," "Khol Do," "Thanda Gosht," and "Upar Neeche Aur Darmiyan." These works were condemned in their time for sexual and disturbing subject matter, yet they endure because Manto used the body, desire, and taboo to expose loneliness, exploitation, communal brutality, and the moral evasions of respectable society.

The volume also includes two substantial pieces in Manto's own voice, "Lazzat-e-Sang" and "Safed Jhoot," which recount and answer the attacks, prosecutions, and public accusations directed at his writing. Together they allow the reader to encounter not only the controversial stories, but Manto's own defense of modern literature and his refusal to prettify a society he believed was already naked.

A further selection of major stories includes "Sahai," "Sharifan," "Blouse," "Hatak," "Naya Qanoon," "Babu Gopi Nath," and "Alvida." Across these works, prostitutes, outcasts, victims of Partition, frustrated lovers, and compromised men and women emerge not as moral examples, but as fully human figures caught in systems of power, poverty, desire, and violence.

Presented in the original Urdu script, Manto Ke Hashiye is both a collection of provocative fiction and a documentary record of the struggle over obscenity, censorship, artistic freedom, and truth in modern South Asian writing. It is intended for mature readers and for students, libraries, and anyone seeking Manto's most controversial and enduring work.
Manto Ke Hashiye presents Saadat Hasan Manto at his most fearless: a writer who brought sexuality, prostitution, desire, violence, humiliation, and social hypocrisy into Urdu fiction without disguising the ugliness of the world around him.

At the center of this Urdu collection are the stories around which accusations, censorship, and legal proceedings for obscenity arose: "Dhuan," "Bu," "Kali Shalwar," "Khol Do," "Thanda Gosht," and "Upar Neeche Aur Darmiyan." These works were condemned in their time for sexual and disturbing subject matter, yet they endure because Manto used the body, desire, and taboo to expose loneliness, exploitation, communal brutality, and the moral evasions of respectable society.

The volume also includes two substantial pieces in Manto's own voice, "Lazzat-e-Sang" and "Safed Jhoot," which recount and answer the attacks, prosecutions, and public accusations directed at his writing. Together they allow the reader to encounter not only the controversial stories, but Manto's own defense of modern literature and his refusal to prettify a society he believed was already naked.

A further selection of major stories includes "Sahai," "Sharifan," "Blouse," "Hatak," "Naya Qanoon," "Babu Gopi Nath," and "Alvida." Across these works, prostitutes, outcasts, victims of Partition, frustrated lovers, and compromised men and women emerge not as moral examples, but as fully human figures caught in systems of power, poverty, desire, and violence.

Presented in the original Urdu script, Manto Ke Hashiye is both a collection of provocative fiction and a documentary record of the struggle over obscenity, censorship, artistic freedom, and truth in modern South Asian writing. It is intended for mature readers and for students, libraries, and anyone seeking Manto's most controversial and enduring work.
Über den Autor
Saadat Hasan Manto (/mn, -t/; Urdu: , pronounced [sädt sn mo]; 11 May 1912 - 18 January 1955) was a writer, playwright and author born in Ludhiana active in British India and later, after the Partition of India, in Pakistan.Writing mainly in Urdu, he produced 22 collections of short stories, a novel, five series of radio plays, three collections of essays and two collections of personal sketches. His best short stories are held in high esteem by writers and critics. Manto was known to write about the bitter truths of society that no one dared to talk about. He is best known for his stories about the partition of India, which he opposed, immediately following independence in [...] was tried for obscenity six times; thrice before 1947 in British India, and thrice after independence in 1947 in Pakistan, but was never convicted. He is acknowledged as one of the finest 20th century Urdu writers
Details
Erscheinungsjahr: 2022
Genre: Importe, Romane & Erzählungen
Rubrik: Belletristik
Medium: Taschenbuch
Reihe: Urdu Classics
Inhalt: Kartoniert / Broschiert
ISBN-13: 9781957756042
ISBN-10: 1957756047
Sprache: Urdu
Einband: Kartoniert / Broschiert
Autor: Manto, Saadat Hasan
Hersteller: Ghazal Sara Dot Org
Urdu Classics
Verantwortliche Person für die EU: Libri GmbH, Europaallee 1, D-36244 Bad Hersfeld, gpsr@libri.de
Maße: 216 x 140 x 10 mm
Von/Mit: Saadat Hasan Manto
Erscheinungsdatum: 25.03.2022
Gewicht: 0,213 kg
Artikel-ID: 121403121