The basics. The details from wikipedia. Themes The main themes of Dharker's poetry include home, freedom, journeys, geographical and cultural displacement, communal conflict and gender politics.
Film and illustration Dharker is also a documentary filmmaker and has written and directed over a hundred films and audio-visuals, centering on education, reproductive health and shelter for women and children. Poet Author Writer. United Kingdom. He died in October because of cancer, with which he had been ill during last eleven years.
This marriage played an important role in the biography of Imtiaz Dharker. Now Imtiaz Dharker divides her time between London and Mumbai. She is popular in Great Britain and India. Her daughter Aysha Dharker is a known actress of movies and television. She created illustrations for her poems on her own.
Dharker is the poet, whose works enter the compulsory programme of the certification commission of the assessment and qualification Alliance on English AQA. I carried on from there to become a foreigner everywhere I went, even in the place planted with my relatives, six-foot tubers sprouting roots, their fingers and faces pushing up new shoots of maize and sugar cane.
All kinds of places and groups of people who have an admirable history would, almost certainly, distance themselves from me. I don't fit, like a clumsily-translated poem; like food cooked in milk of coconut where you expected ghee or cream, the unexpected aftertaste of cardamom or neem.
There's always that point where the language flips into an unfamiliar taste; where words tumble over a cunning tripwire on the tongue; where the frame slips, the reception of an image not quite tuned, ghost-outlined, that signals, in their midst, an alien.
And so I scratch, scratch through the night, at this growing scab on black on white. Everyone has the right to infiltrate a piece of paper. A page doesn't fight back. And, who knows, these lines may scratch their way into your head - through all the chatter of community, family, clattering spoons, children being fed - immigrate into your bed, squat in your home, and in a corner, eat your bread, until, one day, you meet the stranger sidling down your street, realise you know the face simplified to bone, look into its outcast eyes and recognise it as your own.
The skin cracks like a pod. There never is enough water. Imagine the drip of it, the small splash, echo in a tin mug, the voice of a kindly god.
Sometimes, the sudden rush of fortune. Not only does she write poetry, she is also an artist. All the ink drawings in the poetry collections are reproductions of her works, although originally they are much larger. Imtiaz Dharker imagines her books as sequences of both poems and drawings. But of course it is also being used to bring women to heel in the name of religion.
God has been hijacked to justify all kinds of acts of violence.
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