unflinching idealism ... since 1997 archivessitemapabouthelpfeedback
ideas, identities and interactions
  • Home
  • InFocus
  • Themes
  • Columns
  • Articles
  • Fiction
  • iLogs
  • Gallery
  • Unplugged
  • Writers
  • Interactors
  • Tags
Sign in | Join Chowk
web chowk
  • Article
  • Interact
  • read writer comments
  • add to favorites
  • get rss feeds
  • print
  • email this link

Conversations with the Indignant Dead

Shan Anwar May 10, 2000

Latest comments   flat   threaded   latest   oldest   all
listing 1-16   1 2

#18 Posted by Lyahus_Riman on May 17, 2000 4:18:16 pm
Truly captivating.

After reading this one, I had to immediatley use the chowk ``Email to Friend`` service several times.

I hope you finish your play soon.

I remain

Lyahus Riman



reply to this interact write a new interact add to favorites flag objectionable content
#17 Posted by jawahara on May 17, 2000 10:58:08 am
Powerfully written. I was going to write more extolling its virtues, but find my mind occupied by the looped reel of this story, playing over and over again.



reply to this interact write a new interact add to favorites flag objectionable content
#16 Posted by sadna on May 12, 2000 11:22:43 am
The author has an uncanny ability to induce vertigo in the unsophisticated reader as if he/she were himself at the edge of the precipice and contemplating jumping over!!

But, this morning, the sun was shining brightly and there was this heavenly spring rain pouring down, too and Ghulam Ali was singing, coincidentally,

``Mai barasti hai fazaa`on pe, nashaa-taari hai,

Mere saaki ne kahhee`n jaam ucchale honge``

So who is afraid of ... :-)

Sadhana



reply to this interact write a new interact add to favorites flag objectionable content
#15 Posted by zeejah on May 12, 2000 10:28:04 am
I read this 2 days ago, i am still reeling from the effect u wove.... absolutely brilliant!



reply to this interact write a new interact add to favorites flag objectionable content
#14 Posted by fase on May 12, 2000 10:28:04 am
interesting,

the point is not that death is an art. contemplation of death has been a favorite pass time of mankind and that is the imaginative art that the father practices. when you see the inevitability of your end, then you see that inevitability in everything around you. that is what frustrates man, a life to ephemeral for the rational mind to find a meaning in the chaos of things. it is in this helpless chaos that ephemeral life becomes a principle itself, one`s own great meaning. what else more ambitious for feeble man to exert than last and only ppower, the control of your demise.

maybe a little too deep.



reply to this interact write a new interact add to favorites flag objectionable content
#13 Posted by fase on May 12, 2000 2:16:40 am
good



reply to this interact write a new interact add to favorites flag objectionable content
#12 Posted by Urstruly on May 11, 2000 7:14:33 pm
The writer paints a vivid picture of events and his surroundings. His words take one into the realm of imagination where it becomes so hard to differentiate between a dream and a reality. It`s brilliantly written. However, he fails to elaborate the underlying message that ``death is an absolute end?``.



reply to this interact write a new interact add to favorites flag objectionable content
#11 Posted by taimurmalik on May 11, 2000 7:14:33 pm
very touching...I almost believed it as a real life incident::))

keep writing.

Taimur.



reply to this interact write a new interact add to favorites flag objectionable content
#10 Posted by Sobia on May 11, 2000 7:14:33 pm
Interesting, very interesting. I like your style of writing. Are you a professional writer, novelist...?



reply to this interact write a new interact add to favorites flag objectionable content
#9 Posted by fairdinkum on May 11, 2000 10:54:34 am
Powerful, and real. Reflects author`s depth of observation and imagination....

slink, nicely put!



reply to this interact write a new interact add to favorites flag objectionable content
#8 Posted by shan on May 11, 2000 10:54:34 am
thanks to all who took time to comment.

ali, it is actually part of a scene from a play i`m working on. instead of transcribing it into prose directly, i decided to play around with structure.

temporal, right, i guess one can`t put ice in a shot glass. there is a sort of shabby nobility in drinking from a shot glass in your own home.

shandana, thanks for the kind words. it is definitely not true; dad is alive and well, though he did stub his toe something painful last week.



reply to this interact write a new interact add to favorites flag objectionable content
#7 Posted by slink on May 11, 2000 4:47:01 am
this is a real story. i don`t know if it`s true, but it contains truth, the kind of powerful, angry, ugly truth that we call emotion because if we don`t seperate it from the rest of us we won`t be able to deal with it. so we call truth `emotion` and then we run around trying to `figure it all out`, but we can`t because emotion has to be filtered through the sentries of reason and understanding that we ourselves post (and the ones others who care post around us), and we lose most of it in the process.
we roll over for inertia, then we whine when it embraces us.
this story speaks to me of things i`ve pushed away.
thank you for breaking my `writers block`, and please keep posting on chowk.

shandana

reply to this interact write a new interact add to favorites flag objectionable content
#6 Posted by jazba99 on May 11, 2000 2:19:34 am
neat indeed...but frankly, i cant sympathize with the loser who shoots himself to death!

acha likhtay ho sahab

regards

ACERBICJAZBATI



reply to this interact write a new interact add to favorites flag objectionable content
#5 Posted by Godot on May 10, 2000 10:28:00 pm
A fatalistic attempt to overpower the reader. I sympathize neither with the father nor with the son the protagonist. I feel bad for the mom, though. What a couple of losers!



reply to this interact write a new interact add to favorites flag objectionable content
#4 Posted by temporal on May 10, 2000 2:48:30 pm
Shan:

I have always maintained that hard hitting literary devices are difficult to carry in the first person. But here you seem to have pulled off a beauty.

KahaaN say sh’ru karouN?

You quote him three times. Two really, the third is only a continuation of the second. Interspersed with acute observations and surreal hints, his character comes to life in death. And then I realise it is not him, it is the protagonist. And then some doubts emerge.

Was he six (.... and his eldest walks in with a girl .... (and later) .... the second thing happens a few days before he shot himself... I’m six now .....) or was it a typo? And along the same vein, a shot glass is a measuring glass not a drinking glass? Just some minor observations that take nothing away from the main thrust.

And “.... flicking it over the balcony, condemning cigarette to my probable fate. I’d do it, too ..... but I’d do it.” hits like a 100 MPH brick truck out of nowhere especially when this comes after the “I’m lucky” bit. Even with your hints of the Love song of Alfred J. I felt the protagonist’s suicidal instincts could have been developed a little more.

And some more thoughts.....

Seconding Subuhi, where have you been? It has been a while since you surfaced here.......more later, perhaps.

regards

temporal




reply to this interact write a new interact add to favorites flag objectionable content
#3 Posted by qadeer on May 10, 2000 1:27:29 pm
very interesting and touching piece indeed. Reality of death makes living hard and when the living is already hard death can be salvaging.

The thing which would comfort me is how would a dying feel and is there anything after it.What happens after death is a favorite passtime of the living,is it as amusing to the dead or not.

Living is hard indeed but dying is not the answer for me.

Is living the real reality or death is the actual begining,but then I can say many thing about living and would not know anything about the dead.But wait then,I can be fooled by what I know already and not know about anything.



reply to this interact write a new interact add to favorites flag objectionable content
listing 1-16   1 2

Interact Index

    #18 Lyahus_Riman
    #17 jawahara
    #16 sadna
    #15 zeejah
    #14 fase
    #13 fase
    #12 Urstruly
    #11 taimurmalik
    #10 Sobia
    #9 fairdinkum
    #8 shan
    #7 slink
    #6 jazba99
    #5 Godot
    #4 temporal
    #3 qadeer
    #2 subuhi
    #1 AliFYasin

Also by Shan Anwar

  • Conversations with the Indignant Dead
  • Die 90’s, Die
  • The Complete Desi Step-By-Step Guide to Filling Out Your Census Form
more »

Similar Articles

  • Common Sense Left Behind Prashant Bhatt
  • Timeless Waqar Saleem
  • A Little After Three Lajwanti Khemlani
  • Lost That Loving Feeling Tamkeen Shah
  • It Is Raining Rida Abbasi
more »

US Elections 2008 Primaries

  • Hillary Clinton a Better Presidential Candidate
  • Leaders, Heroes and Mountains
  • Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and New American Dreams
  • Pakistan Elections 2008 - An analysis
  • Political Issues Ahead of Pakistan Elections
more »
get rss feed Get Chowk RSS Feed

Get Chowk Newsletter

Latest Interacts

  • dharma: The police should lose... Pleas For Sanity as
  • dharma: If everytime mob goes... Pleas For Sanity as
  • dharma: Re: # 202 "Yes Modi... Pleas For Sanity as
  • KHYBER: RE # 101...THANKS FOR... Pleas For Sanity as
  • tahmed32: #199 om prakash: GT... Pleas For Sanity as
  • jang: the way rico works... Pleas For Sanity as
  • akcheema: Re: # 6; Tolkinin No... Nothing Queer About It
  • om_prakash: Jang Rico would work... Pleas For Sanity as

THEMES

  • Pakistan's Struggle for Democracy
  • The Indian Story
  • Indo-Pak Relations
  • Personal Narratives
  • Religion Today
  • War on Terror
  • Role of Media
  • Call for Social Change
  • Hold Them Accountable
  • Environment and Us
  • Way of Life
more »

Top 5 Articles This Week

  • Popular
  • An Indian Muslim
  • India-Pakistan: Empathy, grief in Pakistan for Mumbai mayhem
  • Pleas For Sanity as Sabres Rattle Over Mumbai Mayhem
  • Terror in Mumbai.....and also in 'Bannu or somewhere'
  • The Future of Indo Pak Conflict
  • Featured
  • There are a Lot of Monkeys
  • White Charade
  • Words of a Woman
  • FOX News and the Smelly Shoes
  • Dilemmas of Creative Children
  • 10 Years Ago
  • Sound Invasion - - Pakistan invades India!!
  • The Lost Generation
  • Pre-Eid Fireworks in Pakistan
  • The Control-Loving Economist is Coming Out of the Closet Again
  • Recollections of my Grandfather

Write on Chowk Interact Guidelines Privacy policy Terms Contact

Copyright © 1997 - 2008 chowk.com. All Rights Reserved
Reproduction of material on any www.chowk.com pages without prior written permissions is strictly prohibited