Bunyad - A Journal of Urdu Studies, Lahore University of Management Sciences - Lahore

بنیاد (مجّلہ دراساتِ اردو)

Gurmani Centre for Languages and Literature
ISSN (print): 2225-6083
ISSN (online): 2709-9687
Abstract

Mirza Hadi Ruswa’s Umrāo Jān Adā (1899), often called the first Urdu novel, depicts the cultural and social world of 19th-century Lucknow. This essay analyzes the text through subaltern and postcolonial theory, arguing that it negotiates voice, agency, and erasure under colonial modernity. Focusing on Umrao Jan, a courtesan marked by gendered and classed marginality, the paper draws on Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak’s concept of subalternity and Ranajit Guha’s critique of elite historiography to examine the politics of representation. While the novel appears to give voice to a marginalized woman, it does so through a male, upper-caste narrator, raising questions about authorship, authenticity, and the limits of subaltern speech. Rejecting the closure of the Bildungsroman, the narrative embraces ambiguity and irony. The essay argues that the novel’s importance lies not only in its literary form but also in its engagement with gender, caste, and colonial knowledge, placing it within key debates on voice, power, and silencing in South Asian literature.

Author(s):

Associate Professor, Department of Urdu, Halim Muslim P.G.College, Kanpur, India

Pakistan

  • merajrana@gmail.com

Details:

Type: Article
Volume: 16
Issue: 1
Language: Urdu
Id: 68597cd8a109d
Pages 127 - 141
Published June 23, 2025
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.