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Sarah Anjum Bari

Sarah Anjum Bari is a writer and editor, pursuing an MFA in the Nonfiction Writing Program at the University of Iowa where she also teaches rhetoric and literary publishing.

shards-of-clarity.jpg

BOOK REVIEW: FICTION / Shards of clarity

Beginning to read Fine Gråbøl’s What Kingdom, translated from the Danish by Martin Aitkin, is like sitting in a silent room, alone, and a voice begins to speak as though from beside you.
16 January 2025, 18:00 PM
16 January 2025, 18:00 PM
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Can our walls make space for our dissent?

The walls of Dhaka city represent the volume and chaos of thousands of people jostling for ever-shrinking space.
11 August 2024, 05:00 AM
11 August 2024, 05:00 AM
illustrations_8.png

THE SHELF / 4 books I was grateful to read this year

It's true, I feel differently about books that I previously disliked or enjoyed reading and books that I want as a physical presence in my life
31 July 2024, 18:00 PM
31 July 2024, 18:00 PM
shah-tazrian-ashrafi.jpg

INTERVIEW / Outliers take centre-stage in Shah Tazrian Ashrafi’s debut collection

It’s hard not to recall our many conversations about literature as I try to summarise Shah Tazrian Ashrafi’s debut collection of short stories. They were always short discussions, opening and closing off in spurts, as happens over text. Exclamations over a new essay collection by Zadie Smith, or a new novel by Isabel Allende.
26 June 2024, 18:00 PM
26 June 2024, 18:00 PM
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INTERVIEW / Rifat Munim on Bangladeshi fiction: ‘This is a diverse terrain you are going to tread on’

In the foreword, I wanted to capture how I, as a child, grew up listening to different stories: ghost stories, mythical stories from both Sanatana and Islamic religious scriptures, and fairy tales from 'Thakurmar Jhuli', compiled by Dakkhinaranjan Mitra Majumdar. It was a time when there were no boundaries for my imagination.
23 February 2024, 18:00 PM
23 February 2024, 18:00 PM
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ESSAY / The first semester is your shitty first draft

Like many veterans, I joined a creative writing MFA program because I wanted to evolve as a writer.
24 January 2024, 18:00 PM
24 January 2024, 18:00 PM
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A glimpse of the Istanbul we don’t know

Here was a woman who was but a dot amidst the throngs of people who watched the Bosphorus Bridge being opened in October 1973, as fireworks erupted over a Turkey that now seamed Asia to Europe.
15 May 2023, 08:55 AM
15 May 2023, 08:55 AM
kanishka_gupta_interview_literary_agent.png

In conversation with South Asia’s preeminent literary agent, Kanishka Gupta

I always tell the authors to make subjective, qualitative decisions. So many of my authors say no to higher offers from publishing houses if they don’t feel comfortable with the publisher or editor.
4 May 2023, 09:13 AM
4 May 2023, 09:13 AM
Nazim Ahmed

Audacity Of Hope

During the 1971 Liberation War, Khurshid Jahan, a 21-year-old student of Bagerhat PC College, Khulna, started training as a freedom fighter under the guidance of Lieutenant Zia Uddin.
28 March 2019, 18:00 PM
Chobi mela

Place-ing CHOBI MELA X

It all starts with contact with light. The process, as we know, requires light to seep into the lens in which the moment captured already exists.
14 March 2019, 18:00 PM
Bangla

The year I spent without Bangla

Growing up schooled in an English medium curriculum can bring with it a certain disconnect with the Bengali language. Or at least it did for me.
21 February 2019, 18:00 PM
Is Dhaka ready for live art

Is Dhaka ready for live art?

If you were anywhere around the Faculty of Fine Arts, DU and the Suhrawardy Udyan from 12 pm and 3 pm last Saturday, February 2, you might have seen a tall woman of Caucasian origin,
7 February 2019, 18:00 PM
Boi Mela1.jpg

Publishers prepare for the Boi Mela

February is synonymous with a string of cultural events, but none perhaps as iconic as the Ekushey Boi Mela, a month-long commemoration of the 1952 Language movement that takes over Suhrawardy Udyan and Bangla Academy.
31 January 2019, 18:00 PM
Alliance Francaise Dhaka

This week at Alliance Francaise Dhaka, art is born out of friendship

From the title of the exhibition to the ambience that hits you upon entering the gallery, one is struck by the presence of alliance, of the fun borne of creative collaboration in the project.
24 January 2019, 18:00 PM
BoJack Horseman

Why BoJack Horseman is life

In season four, episode six of Netflix's BoJack Horseman—titled “Stupid Piece of Sh*t”—BoJack effectively loses it with Hollyhock and his dying mother Beatrice living with him.
13 December 2018, 18:00 PM
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WORDS THAT HEAL: The comfort of literature in times of mental duress

For Mahera help came not only in the form of relatable characters, but also the physical comfort derived from holding onto a book. "I've carried a book or a Kindle with me during the worst times of my life. It's like a security blanket," she told me.
29 November 2018, 18:00 PM
Mohammed Hanif and the voices in his head

Mohammed Hanif and the voices in his head

The Guardian's review of Mohammed Hanif's Red Birds points out how Momo, one of its characters, “complicates our picture of helpless children in refugee camps.”
22 November 2018, 18:00 PM
Nandita Das

For actor and director Nandita Das, filmmaking is activism

Backstage at this year's Dhaka Lit Fest was a riot of activity—of footsteps, voices, human bodies all jostling to snag a conversation with some of their favourite cultural minds.
15 November 2018, 18:00 PM
Frankenstein

Who Made Frankenstein's Monster? Spoiler Alert: It's You

“I am malicious because I am miserable. Am I not shunned and hated by all mankind? Tell me why I should pity man more than he pities me? I will revenge my injuries; if I cannot inspire love, I will cause fear.”
8 November 2018, 18:00 PM
Milkman

Anna Burns' Milkman Takes Place Wherever You Are

We read about this girl. That she may have a name doesn't matter. What matters is that she is a'middle-sister', 'middle' as in relative, as in younger sister to someone, older sister to someone, sister-in-law to someone, and daughter to someone else.
1 November 2018, 18:00 PM
Water Lilies

Monet's 'Water Lilies' and The Ripple Effect

This past year spent studying in France has been a race against the clock. Weeks, months, and semesters passed, and my shortening stay in Paris saw the magnets on my refrigerator room piling up.
25 October 2018, 18:00 PM
mental illness

Virtual play to combat mental illness

Out of the 161 million people of Bangladesh (as of 2015), 16.1 percent of adults and 15.2 percent of five- to 10-year-olds live with mental health issues. Only 0.44 percent of our national budget was allocated for mental health in the same year.
9 October 2018, 18:00 PM
The Marginalia Of Paris

The marginalia of Paris

It's a tale as old as time—Paris as a city of stories. Not just because of the published literature flowing through it ceaselessly, but also the rues, boulevards, bridges, gardens, and buildings royal and ramshackle which contain stories of all those who have passed through them.
27 September 2018, 18:00 PM
Too close for comfort

Too close for comfort

Harrowing messages from strangers that make us laugh more than they actually harm us, have turned “stalking” a carelessly tossed around phrase – if you're young and attractive, you're “supposed” to have stalkers.
16 August 2017, 18:00 PM
In memory of a loud, brilliant, hilarious lady

In memory of a loud, brilliant, hilarious lady

It was a truth universally acknowledged that a single woman of good breeding must be in search of a life led in humble anonymity.
21 July 2017, 18:00 PM
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What's in a pseudonym?

A few years ago, I collaborated with a friend to write about the double standards young girls face in Bangladesh.
17 July 2017, 18:00 PM
My Bollywood Love Affair

My Bollywood love affair

You know that imaginary friend that every child grows up with? Mine was Rahul. Not a storybook character or a person I'd made up at random, but the Rahul of the dimpled smiles and a necklace that spelled 'COOL'.
13 July 2017, 18:00 PM
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Amidst the fear of terrorism, a reassurance

This baggage will be an inescapable part of our reality for the years to come. But the memory of Faraaz's actions lightens the load. It helps to remember that our background isn't one that harboured murderers, but one that instilled a very young man like Faraaz with so much strength, maturity and love for humanity.
1 July 2017, 18:00 PM

Pagination

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