‘Imagined Communities’ in a Shaky Subcontinent
India & Pakistan: Inventing
the Nation
by Ian Talbot
Arnold Publishers, London, 2000
Price: USD 74, Pages: 312
ISBN: 0340706325
Ever since Ian Talbot essayed, in 1996, a remarkable autobiography of Khizr Twana, an outstanding but hitherto unrecognized pre-partition politician and followed it up, in 1999, with a magisterial survey of Pakistan in the last five decades, he has acquired a reputation for historically rich and theoretically stimulating writing. His oeuvre is predicated on fundamental continuities in the Subcontinent's history before and after independence, which is why his later work, Pakistan: A Modern Historv, was able to meticulously trace many contemporary authoritarian trends in the country to antecedent British administrative methods. For Talbot there was certainly no "end of history" in 1947. He is, ergo, of greater relevance than the average South Asian chronicler, who tends to probe no further than the "stroke of the midnight hour". In his new volume, India & Pakistan, Talbot addresses the confounding issue of identity formation in the highly fluid and volatile subcontinental environment before and after 1947.Expectedly, he does not fail the reader.