Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Sidhwa, Bapsi - Kamala Edwards (review date fall 1991)
Sidhwa, Bapsi - Kamala Edwards (review date fall 1991)
Kamala Edwards (review date fall 1991)
SOURCE: Edwards, Kamala. “Cracked Identities.” Belles Lettres 7, no. 1 (fall 1991): 47-8.
[In the following review, Edwards compliments Cracking India for its incisive and poignant depiction of the Partition of India.]
In Bapsi Sidhwa's novel Cracking India, the reader encounters a richly textured, multicultural society suddenly in flux. Within three months, seven million Muslims and five million Hindus and Sikhs find themselves uprooted in “the largest and most terrible exchange of population known to history.” But the 1947 partition made Hindus, Muslims, and Sikhs each other's enemies, overnight. Subsequently, “one man's religion became another man's poison,” and religious affiliations and national identity emerge as crucial points of conflict in the novel.
Memories of partition surface in all three of Sidhwa's novels, but are nowhere as penetrating and poignantly...
[The entire page is 845 words long]
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- Introduction
- Principal Works
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Criticism
- Judy Cooke (review date 19 September 1980)
- Patricia Craig (review date 26 September 1980)
- Frank Rudm (review date 18 October 1980)
- Alamgir Hashmi (review date autumn 1984)
- Marianne Wiggins (review date 26 February 1988)
- Bapsi Sidhwa and David Montenegro (interview date 26 March 1988/24 March 1989)
- Maria Couto (review date 1 April 1988)
- Tariq Rahman (review date autumn 1988)
- Kamala Edwards (review date fall 1991)
- Jagdev Singh (essay date 1992)
- Edward Hower (review date 24 November 1992)
- Edit Villarreal (review date 12 December 1993)
- Chris Goodrich (review date 14 January 1994)
- Adele King (review date spring 1994)
- Novy Kapadia (essay date 1996)
- Alamgir Hashmi (essay date 1996)
- Bapsi Sidhwa and Preeti Singh (interview date 1998)
- Jill Didur (essay date July 1998)
- Ambreen Hai (essay date summer 2000)
- Further Reading
- Copyright
