English, asked by hemalathav, 8 months ago

this landscape these people by Zulfikar ghose summary​

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Answered by Bhargav9942
6

Answer:

Born in 1935 in Sialkot, Pakistan, Zulfikar Ghose moved with his family to Bombay during the war in 1942. By 1965 he had only returned to Sialkot twice, once to attend a marriage and once to mourn a death. Thus, his writing reflects nostalgia for his roots ( "Mystique of Roots"), as well as confusion about where they are, India or Pakistan ( "Loss of India").

In 1952, he made his way to London, where he lived with his father in moderate lack of money. He obtained his degree from Keele University, and spent some years as a cricket correspondent for the Observer while working on his writing. Anthony Smith, B.S. Johnson, and Ghose met when all three served as joint editors, along with John Fuller, of an annual anthology of student poets called Universities' Poetry. He also made the acquaintance of Ted Hughes, Sylvia Plath, and the American novelist Janet Burroway, with whom he occasionally collaborated.

From 1963-69, Ghose taught and wrote in London. Two collections of his poetry were published, The Loss of India (1964) and Jets From Orange (1967), along with an autobiography called Confessions of a Native-Alien (1965) and his first two novels, The Contradictions (1966) and The Murder of Aziz Khan (1969). He met, courted, and in 1964 married the Brazilian artist Helena de la Fontaine. During this time he kept up his correspondence with Anthony Smith despite the differing courses of their lives, and would continue to do so in the years to come.

In 1969, Zulfikar Ghose uprooted and replanted himself once again in Austin, Texas, where he took up a position at the University of Texas as a professor of English. He continued writing and has published a number of novels including the Incredible Brazilian trilogy (1972-1985), as well as the collections of poetry The Violent West (1972) and A Memory of Asia (1984).

Answered by Mithalesh1602398
0

Answer:

Zulfikar Ghose is a Pakistani American writer of novels, poetry, and commentary on cultural alienation. He was born on March 13, 1935, in Sialkot, India (now Pakistan). Ghose went to England with his family after growing up as a Muslim in Sialkot and the predominately Hindu city of Bombay (Mumbai).

Explanation:

Step : 1  In addition to five books of literary critique, he also created short tales and novels. The poems in Ghose's collections The Loss of India (1964), Selected Poems (1991), and 50 Poems (2010) frequently deal with the journeys and recollections of an alien who is self-aware. The 2009 book Beckett's Company is a compilation of literary and personal articles.

Step : 2  Zulfikar Ghose, a poet who is Pakistani-American, wrote the poem "Decomposition." This poem combines aesthetic construction with physical decay and is centred on an image of an elderly beggar sleeping on the sidewalk. One of Zulfikar Ghose's most well-known poems is titled "Decomposition."

Step : 3  The author Zulfikar A. Ghose writes novels, poems, and essays. He works in the surrealist style of most Latin American novels, fusing fantasy and brutal realism. He is a Pakistani native who has lived for a long time in Texas. Ghose was raised as a Muslim in Sialkot and mostly Hindu Bombay (Mumbai), after which he migrated to England with his family. His mother, Selima (née Virk), was a housewife, while his father, Khwaja Mohammed Ghosh, was a businessman. Before leaving India in 1952, the family relocated to Bombay (now Mumbai) in 1942.

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