Manto: The Unsentimentalist
Sunil Khilnani explores the life and work of India's master of the short story Saadat Hasan Manto.
Sunil Khilnani explores the life and work of India's master of the short story Saadat Hasan Manto.
Manto didn't fuss much over his sentences. He wrote in a rush, at hack speed, for money – and often legless drunk. His raw, visceral, personal response to his experiences – including the massacre at Amritsar, cosmopolitan Bombay and the horror of Partition – matched a historical moment that needed a raw, human response. In a divided country that Manto thought possessed "too few leaders, and two many stuntmen", his sentences asserted, plainly, the human facts – not the moral or political motives that produced them.
As Professor Khilnani says, "for all the velocity that his economy of language creates, the pressure of a story builds slowly. You're never quite prepared for the moment that blasts off the emotional roof. His sentences etch a groove in the mind not because he saturates his truths about atrocity in lurid color, but because he delivers them off-hand, even elliptically."
Readings by Sagar Arya.
Producer: Martin Williams
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- Fri 11 Mar 2016 13:45Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 4
- Fri 13 Aug 2021 19:45Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 4
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