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Dapaan : tales from Kashmir's conflict

By: Publication details: London: Hurst Publishers, 2025.Description: 323p., glos., bib., note., ind. 22 cm X 14 cmISBN:
  • 9789360451431
Subject(s): Summary: Summary: n Kashmir, folktales often begin with the word dapaan—‘it is said’. So too do local narratives told and retold about the past, among people who have lived through nearly eight decades of a bitter contest between India and Pakistan. This is a story about stories. In the hyper-nationalist din over a territorial dispute, Kashmiri voices are often drowned out. Yet the region is home to long habits of storytelling, its communities intensely engaged with history-keeping. For centuries, folk traditions of theatre, song and fable have flowed into a reservoir of common talk. Mythology, hearsay and historical memory coexist here without any apparent hierarchies. By the time armed rebellion spread through Kashmir in 1989, many of these traditions had died out, or been forced underground. But they have left traces in the way ordinary people speak about the conflict—in their songs of loss, and jokes about dark times; in fantastical geographies, and rumours turning the Valley’s militarisation into a ghostly haunting. From Partition to the 2019 Indian crackdown, Ipsita Chakravarty discovers a vivid, distinctly Kashmiri vision of events that have often been narrated from the top-down. Her interviewees conjure a kaleidoscope of towns and villages shaping their own memories.
List(s) this item appears in: New Arrivals 13 Oct 2025
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Books KEIC 843.546 CHA (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 24001

Recommended by: Rasananda Panda

Summary: n Kashmir, folktales often begin with the word dapaan—‘it is said’. So too do local narratives told and retold about the past, among people who have lived through nearly eight decades of a bitter contest between India and Pakistan.

This is a story about stories. In the hyper-nationalist din over a territorial dispute, Kashmiri voices are often drowned out. Yet the region is home to long habits of storytelling, its communities intensely engaged with history-keeping. For centuries, folk traditions of theatre, song and fable have flowed into a reservoir of common talk. Mythology, hearsay and historical memory coexist here without any apparent hierarchies.

By the time armed rebellion spread through Kashmir in 1989, many of these traditions had died out, or been forced underground. But they have left traces in the way ordinary people speak about the conflict—in their songs of loss, and jokes about dark times; in fantastical geographies, and rumours turning the Valley’s militarisation into a ghostly haunting. From Partition to the 2019 Indian crackdown, Ipsita Chakravarty discovers a vivid, distinctly Kashmiri vision of events that have often been narrated from the top-down. Her interviewees conjure a kaleidoscope of towns and villages shaping their own memories.

Contents: PART I
LAUGHING AT THE KING
1. Zulm
2. Crackdown Paether
3. You May Be Turned Into a Cat
4. The Buffoon King
PART II POSSESSION
5. Raantas
6. The Steel Daen
7. The Braid Choppers
8. Ghosts in the Ground
PART III LOSS
9. Singing Bodies
10. Melancholia
PART IV
BLOOD MAPS
13. Firdous Cinema
14. Light and Dark
15. The Afterlives of Land
Epilogue : Dismemberment

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