Published January 3, 2023 | Version v1
Journal article Open

"A Refugee from Belief": Agha Shahid Ali's Poetics of Rupture

  • 1. University of Chicago

Description

This article attempts a reassessment of the political aspirations within Agha Shahid Ali's poetics through a close reading of The Country without a Post Office. Although Shahid's formal innovations have often been prioritized over his political commitments within scholarly evaluations of his work, I contend that in this collection, Agha Shahid Ali practices a "poetics of rupture": holding themes of coherence and disruption, continuity and breakage, the global and the local in sustained tension with each other throughout the volume. Forged through a political commitment to represent Kashmir in crisis, his poetics of rupture is simultaneously formally founded on breakage and discontinuity, and itself ruptures, as I eventually propose, the very binaries (poetics versus polemics, personal versus political, local versus global) that shadow political poetry. I demonstrate the specifics of Shahid's poetics of rupture through an analysis of his work with literary allusions and poetic forms. Eventually, this article contends that recognizing the political import of his poetics of rupture has consequences for our recognition of the crisis in Kashmir itself and the ethical and formal possibilities surrounding the representation of this crisis.

Files

Refugee-from-Belief.pdf

Files (438.6 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:6d7bdd1b890dc851036742e51eeb9ebd
438.6 kB Preview Download

Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1017/pli.2022.24
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:5780

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Arts & Humanities Division
Department(s)
English Language and Literature