The weight of history: a lament for lost truths
To the conscientious and the significant,
As I ponder the meaning of history today, I am reminded of the Persian adage, "History repeats itself and the debt of sorrow remains unpaid." In Pakistan, our understanding of history has been reduced to a simplistic narrative of dates and events, stripped of nuance and complexity. We inherit a legacy of biased chronicles, penned by the victors and rulers, while the voices of the real people remain whispers in the wind. Our art history, in particular, has been a casualty of this myopic approach. The brutal truncation of our cultural heritage, the denial of our pluralistic roots and the propagation of a sanitised, Islamised narrative have left our students bewildered and bereft. We are left grappling with the fragments of a rich legacy, unable to fully comprehend the material evidence in terms of the art that surrounds us.
The burden of genuineness and authenticity demanded from non-Western art historians can be overwhelming. As noted, "scholars of and in the third world often need to refer to........
© The Express Tribune
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 Toi Staff
Toi Staff Gideon Levy
Gideon Levy Tarik Cyril Amar
Tarik Cyril Amar Stefano Lusa
Stefano Lusa Mort Laitner
Mort Laitner Robert Sarner
Robert Sarner Mark Travers Ph.d
Mark Travers Ph.d Andrew Silow-Carroll
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Ellen Ginsberg Simon


 
                                                            
 
         
 