10,000 Memories
| Editor | Guneeta Singh Bhalla Fakhra Hasan Fahad Nahvi Udayan Das Erin Riggs Amardip Kumar Singh |
|---|---|
| Language | English |
| Subject | Oral history of the 1947 Partition of India World War II in South Asia |
| Genre | Non-fiction |
| Publisher | The 1947 Partition Archive |
Publication date | 8 August 2024 |
| Publication place | United States |
| Media type | Print (hardcover) |
| Pages | 582 |
| ISBN | 979-8-9867479-0-3 |
10,000 Memories: A Lived History of Partition, Independence and World War II in South Asia is a 2024 non-fiction compendium of oral histories produced by the non-profit, The 1947 Partition Archive. The 582-page first volume, edited by founder Guneeta Singh Bhalla with Fakhra Hasan, Fahad Nahvi, Udayan Das, Erin Riggs, and Amardip Kumar Singh, was published in Berkeley, California on 8 August 2024.[1] Drawing on thousands of witness testimonies recorded across the South Asian subcontinent, the book reconstructs the intertwined wartime and decolonization experiences that led to the 1947 Partition of India.[2][3]
Contents
10,000 Memories is printed as a double-sided "eastern" and "western" book: one cover opens in Kandahar, Afghanistan, while the reverse begins in Yangon, Myanmar, with the narratives meeting in the Deccan Plateau.[2] More than 1,000 archival photographs accompany 400 condensed life-story summaries, each framed by contextual sidebars on military campaigns, refugee corridors and political negotiations.[4] The editors emphasize regional diversity while linking local memories to larger theatres such as the China-Burma-India front and the Bengal famine.[5]
Reception
Critics greeted the volume as an accessible bridge between scholarship and family memory. Prasun Chaudhuri of The Telegraph characterized a pre-launch reading in Kolkata as "a reminder of how Partition shaped the electoral choices of a generation for their entire lifetime".[6] Times of India highlighted the book's "pan-South Asian scope" and the inclusion of 400 first-person narratives.[4]
An event at SOAS University of London praised the book for offering "a unique dimension and insight into the history of Partition ... unlike any previously written."[7] The University of Florida International Center launch event hailed the work as "the first and largest pan-South Asian oral-history survey ever conducted."[8]
References
- ^ Ahmad, Zubair (20 August 2023). "Never-ending stories". The News International.
- ^ a b Alexander, Deepa (13 April 2023). "Stories of the Partition of India, based on the largest South-Asian oral history survey ever, now compiled in a book" – via The Hindu.
- ^ "Gripping storytelling session busts many myths surrounding Partition". Hindustan Times. 14 March 2023.
- ^ a b "Partition archive' inaugural book 10,000 Memories, a lived history of partition set to release on Friday". 9 March 2023 – via The Times of India.
- ^ Archive, The 1947 Partition; Khan, Ehsan (8 August 2024). 10,000 Memories: A Lived History of Partition, Independence and World War II in South Asia. 1947 Partition Archive. ISBN 979-8-9867479-0-3.
{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ Chaudhuri, Prasun (12 March 2023). "The Partition Party". The Telegraph.
- ^ "10,000 Memories: A lived history of partition, independence and World War II in South Asia | SOAS". SOAS. 26 April 2023.
- ^ "10,000 Memories: A Lived History of Partition | International Center University of Florida".