Green fire / Shahidul Alam.
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Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
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Liberation War Shelves | 954.92051 A318g 2010 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 01 | Available | 019619 |
Browsing Library, Independent University, Bangladesh (IUB) shelves, Shelving location: Liberation War Shelves Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
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954.92051 A318b 2011 বাঙ্গালীর মুক্তিযুদ্ধের ইতিবৃত্ত / | 954.92051 A318b 2013 বাংলাদেশের স্বাধীনতা যুদ্ধঃ রাঙ্গুনিয়া ১৯৭১/ | 954.92051 A318g 2008 গেরিলা থেকে সম্মুখ যুদ্ধে. দ্বিতীয় খন্ড / | 954.92051 A318g 2010 Green fire / | 954.92051 A318j 2010 জীবন-কথায় মুক্তিযুদ্ধ ও বাংলাদেশ/ | 954.92051 A318m 1998 মুক্তিযোদ্ধার দিনগুলি/ | 954.92051 A318r 2007 রক্তে বাংলার মুখ/ |
Green Fire is fictional account of a group of teenagers from an elite high school in the former East Pakistan who were suddenly confronted, upon graduation, with the much wider world that their privileged upbringing and exclusive schooling had largely sheltered them from having to deal with. The story centers on the principal protagonist, Tanvir Mahmud, and is layered in the context of time, space, and social class. The period that Green Fire covers is from the beginning of 1967, when Tanvir and his classmates were high schools senior to the end of 1971, when most were university students and were caught up in Bangladesh’s liberation war that was to end with the emergence of Bangladesh as a sovereign independent nation-state on 16 December 1971.
The characters reacted to the events of 1971 in different ways, but that emerges out of their experience was their final loss of innocence in a world whose harsh realities were visited on them before they were adequately prepared to meet many of those. The fictional account is interspersed with factual political events that led to the growth of Bengali nationalism and the military crackdown of 25 March 1971. But the story is essentially about a rarefied section of society in the former East Pakistan who had to cope with progressive time and space that encompassed issues and people that its children had largely ignored throughout, or were sheltered from, their days in an elite high school. In one sense, Green Fire portrays a society that was shattered by the traumatic events immediately leading up to, and during, Bangladesh’s liberation struggle.