India's partition "When the times are over, the soul of a long-oppressed country finds discourse, we move from old age to a new era, this moment comes, but that is rare" - Jawarhalal Nehru 1947 A new Islamic republic of Pakistan was born on August 14th. In the midnight of the next day, India has won the freedom of colonial rule and has finished its presence in the UK for about 350 years in India. In a struggle for freedom, Gandhi wrote an action called "Give Every Englishman" to release their property in Asia and Africa, especially India (Philips and Wainwright, 567).
Naturally, zoning and its legacy were always subjects of widespread participation in literature, movies, popular culture and even television commercials. In this course we will explore how zoning is involved in literature and popular culture, from contemporary depictions of the late 1940s to current teleconferences in India, Pakistan and Bangladesh. We will read these texts and numerous academic research on history division, anthropology and gender research, especially focusing on the history of small regions and South Asian nationalism. Throughout this process, we use the concept of partitions as "events" and ask how the district continues to affect living in South Asia and other regions today.
Pakistan literature took place after the division of India and Pakistan. There are basically two kinds of literature in South Asia, Urdu literature and British literature. Pakistan is found in almost all the major languages of Pakistan in Urdu, English, Punjabi, Pashto, Celiki, Barochian and Cindi. Pakistani letter academy is the main official platform for Pakistan literature. Poetry is the art and occupation of Pakistan. It started from the Persian Empire. Poems after independence are written in Urdu and regional languages. Faiz ahmad is considered to be the biggest poet in Pakistan. Pakistan is known as the hometown of poet Most Pakistani are writing several poems.
The Indian sector was a British Indian division in 1947, with two independent rules of India and Pakistan. Today Indian territory is India Republic and Pakistan territory is today Pakistan Islamic Republic and Bangladesh People's Republic. This district spans three provinces, Assam, Bangladesh, Punjab, based on the majority of Hindus or Muslims in the area. The border between India and Pakistan is called the Radcliffe line. It also includes divisions between the two new territories of the British Indian Army, the British Indian Navy, the civil servants of India, the railroad and the Central Finance Department. As the British government said the Indian independence law in 1947 prescribed this division, which led to the dissolution of the British Raj. Two autonomous nations of Pakistan and India were legally founded at midnight from 14th to 15th August 1947.