Non-Fiction

Ways of Being | Sabyn Javeri ed. | 2023

Does writing have a nationality? Are writers defined by geography, language, religion, gender and ethnicity alone, or are there other attributes that identify them.? Fifteen of the most articulate and creative non-fiction writers from Pakistan eloquently demonstrate that, as Sabyn Javeri says, "Who you are is more accurately represented by what you stand for, than by where you are from." Large-scale migration and transnational mobility have rendered national borders porous, while the Internet has internationalised communication in a way that practically erases territorial boundaries. Questions about 'being' and 'belonging' acquire an urgency that demands articulation: how does a writer relate to her context, whether at 'home' or 'away', and locate herself and her writing in it? For the purposes of this anthology, Javeri believes that, "A Pakistani writer is one who feels a connection to the land either by origin or by sensibility/" This rich and fascinating collection of reflections, reminiscence, musings-and excellent writing-features Taymiya R. Zaman, Hananah Zaheer, Feryal Ali Gauhar, Sadia Khatri, Saba Karim /khan, Soniah Kamal, Kamila Shamsie, Sabyn Javeri, Rukhasans Ahmad, Humera Afridi, Muneeza Shamsie, Uzma Aslam Khan, Shahnaz Rouse, Noren Haq & Bina Shah. They are among the best creative non-fiction writers anywhere. ​

Benazir Bhutto: Strongest Woman to Lead Pakistan in Life and Death (People & Society, Herald, Dawn, 2017). Read here.

How Remote Learning Subverts Power and Privilege in Higher Education, EdSurge, 30 August 2021 (voted best idea of the day by the Aspen Institute). Read here.

Asif Farrukhi: Larger Than Life (1959-2020), The Journal of Commonwealth Publication, November 2020. Read here.