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Agha Shahid AliA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
“One Way Ticket” by Langston Hughes, 1949
Hughes’s poem, written four decades before “Postcard from Kashmir,” treats migration more unequivocally. It shows how migration is sometimes a life-saving measure, as it was for Black Americans over the 20th century. In such a state of crisis, nostalgia is an encumbrance. Therefore, the poem does away with metaphors to convey its urgent truth. The poem presents the theme of migration and exile from a different lens, of those made to flee parts of their own country because of oppression and violence.
“I Sing of an Old Land” by Ha Jin, 1996
The novelist Ha Jin grew up in China, emigrating to the United States when he was a young man. Jin’s blank-verse poem is a lament for the China he left behind. Though moving from China was necessary for Jin, since in 1989 the government began to crack down on students and intellectuals, he still grieves and craves “that land” (Lines 29, 48), the land of his birth. The poem’s tone is more direct than the elegiac “Postcard from Kashmir,” but it shares the themes of an immigrant’s complex emotions.
“Land” by Agha Shahid Ali, 2001
“Land” is a ghazal in English, part of Ali’s last collection Call Me Ishmael Tonight: A Book of Ghazals (2003). The subject is an identity caught between two homes; like in “Postcard from Kashmir,” the image of “home” recurs here. It is interesting to note the similarities and differences between the two poems, marking different points in Ali’s poetic trajectory. While “Postcard from Kashmir” follows no formal structure, “Land” is written in couplets, with the last word of every couplet being the same through the poem. The repetition gives the poem rhythmic coherence and also builds to a crescendo the emotions associated with the loaded word “land.” Written over two decades after “Postcard,” “Land” also references the violence in Kashmir. This shows the poet’s cognizance of his homeland’s worsening situation.
“Agha Shahid Ali: The Lost Interview” by Stacey Chase, 1990
In this informal, freewheeling interview with Café Review editor Stacey Chase, Ali offers important insights into his poetry, on why he considered himself an exile, and about his multiple cultural influences. Though some of Chase’s questions are rooted in the Western gaze, Ali’s answers are always playful, irreverent, and illuminating.
“‘The Ghat of the Only World’: Agha Shahid Ali in Brooklyn” by Amitav Ghosh, 2002
Novelist Amitav Ghosh writes a heartfelt eulogy for Ali after the poet’s death from brain cancer in December 2001. Ghosh and Ali were friends during the poet’s last years, sharing a literary sensibility and an affection for India. Not only does Ghosh’s piece paint a vivid portrait of Ali, it also analyzes the evolving image of Kashmir in Ali’s poems. Ghosh traces how Ali’s representation of Kashmir became increasingly engulfed in pessimism as the region’s conflict worsened.
“Crisis of National Identity in Agha Shahid Ali’s Poem ‘Postcard from Kashmir’” by Ajay Singh, 2018
First published in the Journal of Advances and Scholarly Researches in Allied Education, this paper by scholar Ajay Singh analyzes the themes of immigration and national identity in “Postcard from Kashmir.” Singh does a comparative study with other poems on exile, such as those by Palestinian poet Mahmoud Darwish.