written after the great war of Kurukshetrs, Shanti Parvo, the twelfth book of the Mahabharata, is a treatise on peace, the ideals of statehood and peaceful governance, which also simultaneously justifies upper-caste hegemony. hierarchy and the need for organised violence. Des Raj Kali's Shanti Parov, in contrast, brilliantly parodies the 'peace' claims of its source text and provides a radical Dalit response from the margins of history to these justifications of the ruling elite-through gentle interrogation, subversive literary technique and fragments of alternate history.
A post-Independence novel set in the heartland of Punjab, Shanti Parav invites a study of post-colonial socio-political dynamics in India from a Punjabi Dalit perspective. It locates the Dalit within the caste-religion-power nexus, and furnishes alternate narratives of the freedom struggle, terrorism, state violence, development, capitalism and democracy.
The proletarian context of Shanti Parav is harsh and stark, but also colourful, irreverent, carnivalesque, even absurd. Boldly experimental, the novel has a dual narrative which playfully challenges the reader to acquire new ways of reading and interpreting a text. The 'fictional' text in the upper half of the page narrates autobiographical stories that recount the struggles and joys of the protagonist's immediate, everyday subaltern world, while in the lower half run 'realistic', quirky, grand historical monologues by three retired Dalit characters who offer philosophical discourses on governance, violence and peace.
Des Raj Kali is an acclaimed Punjabi Dalit writer, historian and columnist. His primary areas of interest are the Ghadar movement, Dalit issues, Punjabi literature, myth and culture. He has published fourteen books; of them three are anthologies of short stories: Kath-Kali (1996), Fakiri (2006), and Yahaan Chai Achhi Nahi Banti (The Tea Isn't Good Here, 2015); and six are novels, with his first one, Parneshwari (2008), named after a peasant goddess, Antaheen (2008), Pratham Pauran (2009), Shanti Parav (2009), Shehr Vich Saan Hon Da Matlabb (What it Means to Be a Bull in the City, 2018), and Tasihey Kade Buddhe Nahi Honde (Sorrows Never Age, 2019). Kali has also authored four books of historical research on the Ghadar Party, a revolutionary organisation founded in America in 1913 to free India from British imperialism. As a journalist and columnist, he has written numerous essays on Punjabi society and culture. He also edits and runs a literary quarterly called Lakeer.
**Contents and Sample Pages**
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