An edition of Meatless days (1989)

Meatless days

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Meatless days
Sara Suleri
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  • 5.00 ·
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Last edited by MARC Bot
August 19, 2022 | History
An edition of Meatless days (1989)

Meatless days

  • 5.00 ·
  • 1 Rating
  • 19 Want to read
  • 1 Currently reading
  • 0 Have read

In this narrative of elegy and leavetaking, a remarkable writer negotiates the uncertain distance between personal and political history, between her loss and celebration, between the Third World and the First. The book's nine chapters intertwine the violent history of Pakistan's independence with the author's most intimate memories - of her Welsh mother, an English teacher of spare, abstracted eloquence, of her Pakistani father, Z. A. Suleri, a prominent (and frequently jailed) political journalist; of her tenacious grandmother Dadi and five siblings; of the friends who accompany (at a distance or close at hand) her own passage to the West. Meatless Days is an act of postcolonial mourning offered with redeeming humour and a critical eye to the very possibility of autobiographical writing.

Suleri's need to reflect upon and reconstruct the lives of her family answers her father's withdrawal from the subject. Z. A. Suleri supported the independence of Pakistan in his journalism but emerged from the partition of the subcontinent much like the country itself, disoriented, unsure what to do next, and with less family than at the outset. It is, however, the women and the relations among them that give Suleri's narrative its strongest celebratory impulse. In a sequence of tales that proceeds by metaphor rather than by chronology, Suleri recounts her mother's voluntary exile, her sister Ifat's paternal estrangement, her grandmother's love of God and food, and, finally, her own departure from her father's Pakistan to live in the United States. Throughout the book, preparing and eating food allegorize Suleri's concern with the relationship between men and women and between these characters and the historical world they inhabit. But the central obsessions of Suleri's meditation emerge from a series of deaths, two of them sudden and terrible - first her mother's, then Dadi's, and finally Ifat's.

Although a deeply personal book, Meatless Days is also an account of the colonial experience of the subcontinent and the persistently political issues of race, gender, and language. It suggests, furthermore, a new direction for autobiography in its deft questioning of the boundaries between public and private history. But Meatless Days is, finally, a profoundly moving literary work.

Publish Date
Language
English
Pages
186

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Previews available in: English

Edition Availability
Cover of: Meatless Days
Meatless Days
June 11, 1991, University Of Chicago Press
Paperback in English
Cover of: Meatless days.
Meatless days.
1991, Flamingo, Flamingo / HarperCollins
in English
Cover of: Meatless days
Meatless days
1990, Collins
in English
Cover of: Meatless days
Meatless days
1989, University of Chicago Press
in English

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Book Details


Edition Notes

Published in
Chicago
Genre
Biography

Classifications

Library of Congress
PE64.S84 A3 1989

The Physical Object

Pagination
v, 186 p. ;
Number of pages
186

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL22841036M
ISBN 10
0226779807
LCCN
88029517
Library Thing
37914
Goodreads
4633788

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History

Download catalog record: RDF / JSON / OPDS | Wikipedia citation
August 19, 2022 Edited by MARC Bot normalize LCCNs
May 26, 2020 Edited by Lisa merge authors
August 19, 2010 Edited by IdentifierBot added LibraryThing ID
April 16, 2010 Edited by bgimpertBot Added goodreads ID.
January 7, 2009 Created by ImportBot Imported from Buffalo State College record