Historicity of Text and Textuality of History: A New Historicist Analysis of Sorayya Khan’s City of Spies

Authors

  • Rao Aisha Sadiq PhD Scholar, Lecturer Department of English Institute of Southern Punjab, Multan, Pakistan Author
  • Saba Mohy-Ud-Din Chishti Lecturer Department of English Institute of Southern Punjab, Multan, Pakistan Author
  • Hania Iftikhar Lecturer Department of English Institute of Southern Punjab, Multan, Pakistan Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.61506/01.00151

Keywords:

History, Historicity, Textuality, New Historicism, Pakistani Writers

Abstract

Literary works are informed by the historical context. This is vividly traceable in the Pakistani fiction writers who re-enact history in more truthful way. The present study intends to explore the historicity of text and textuality of history in Sorayya Khan’s City of Spies. It highlights the reconstruction of traditional history through Khan's art of writing back of the history of Military coup in the mould of new historical scenario. The text traces the events of 1970s coup through a young protagonist’s perspective. The research objectives are: to explore the historicity of text and textuality of history and to trace out the new historicist aspects of City of Spies. While using the qualitative research paradigm, the researcher applies theoretical lens of Louis Montrose derived from Professing the Renaissance: The Poetics and Politics of Culture, to the textual analysis of Khan’s text. The research findings endorse that the text is history-oriented and proffers an alternative vision of history. The study is significant for future research to interpret literary text new historically. 

References

Aftab, U., & Yousaf, U., (2022). Exploring City of Spies: Aliya’s Experience of Zia and Post-Zia Pakistan. International Bulletin of Literature and Linguistics, 5, 01-09.

Anam, S., & Khan, A. M. (2023). Cultural Hybridization and Political Upheaval in Khan’s City of Spies. Global Social Sciences Review, VIII(II), 345-354.

Chakrabarti, B., (2017) Topography of Loss: Homeland, History and Memory in Sorayya Khan’s Fiction.

Chishty, N. (2015, September 6). A Witness to History: City of Spies. Dawn Magazine.

Cilano, C. (2013). Contemporary Pakistani fiction in English: idea, nation, state. New York: Routledge.

Farid, I., Aftab, A., & Iqbal, Z., (2021). A Critique of American Supremacist Politics in Cold War in Sorayya Khan’s City of Spies. Global Social Sciences Review (GSSR).

Hussain, S., Ali, M., & Javed, M. A. (2022). Reconstructing Identity: Self-Fashioning in City of Spies by Sorayya Khan. Global Language Review, VII(II), 136-147.

Khan, S. (2015). City of Spies. Aleph Book Company, New Delhi, India.

Leffler, M.P. (2010). Origins of the Cold War : An International History (Rewriting Histories) New York, Routledge.

Montrose, L.A. (1989). Professing the Renaissance: the poetics and politics of culture. In The New Historicism. New York: Routledge.

Shah, S. (2015, September-November). Crash of Civilisations.

Tyson, L. (2014). Critical Theory Today: A User-friendly guide, Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge.

Waterman , D. F. (2015). Where Worlds Collide: Pakistani Fiction in the New Millennium. Oxford University Press.

Downloads

Published

2023-12-20

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Sadiq, R. A. ., Chishti, S. M.-U.-D. ., & Iftikhar, H. . (2023). Historicity of Text and Textuality of History: A New Historicist Analysis of Sorayya Khan’s City of Spies. Bulletin of Business and Economics (BBE), 12(3), 850-854. https://doi.org/10.61506/01.00151

Similar Articles

1-10 of 57

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.

Most read articles by the same author(s)

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 > >>