Dhuan (short story collection) explained

Dhuan
Title Orig:Dhuan
Author:Saadat Hasan Manto
Country:British India
Language:Urdu
Publisher:Saqi Book Depot (Delhi)
Pub Date:1941 (first edition)
Media Type:Print

Dhuan (Urdu: Smoke) is a collection of short stories in Urdu by Saadat Hasan Manto first published in 1941.

Background

Dhuan was first published in 1941 from Delhi. This was Manto’s third collection of original short stories after Atish Paray and Manto Ke Afsanay. It was written in Delhi during the time Manto spent in All India Radio. The collection also included reprints of Manto’s earlier stories published in Atish Paray such as Chori, Ji Aaya Sahab (Qasim) and Dewana Shair. An identical collection under the title Kali Salwar (Black Trouser) was also published in Lahore in the same year.

Content

The stories in this collection include:

Themes

Dhuan (Smoke), from which the collection takes its title, was first published in the Urdu magazine Saqi. The story deals with the awakening of sexual urges in a twelve-year old boy, Masud. In Cuhe daan (Mousetrap), Manto depicts the early discovery of romantic love by teenages.

Lalten (Laltern), Misri ki dali (A Piece of Rock Candy) and Namukamal Tahrir (Unfinished composition) are similar tales of attraction of a vacationing young man for a young mountain girl.

Manto explores political issues in Matami Jalsa (Assembly in Mourning) which is a satire on the reaction of people to the news of the death of Mustafa Kemal Atatürk. The story describes an assembly of people gathered to honour Ataturk following his death. Taraqqi Pasand (Progressive), based by a true incident involving Rajinder Singh Bedi and Devindra Satyarthi, is a friendly ribbing on the Progressive Writers' Movement to which Manto was associated.

He touches on social realism in Kali Salwar (Black Trouser) through the character of Sultana, a prostitute whose business is falling. First published in Adab-i-Latif in Lahore, it was banned by the British government under section 292 of the Indian Penal Code on grounds of obscenity.

Aiktras ki Aankh (An Actress’s Eye), Qabz (Constipation) and Paresaani ka sabab (The Reason for Worry) are sketches on the people of the Bombay film industry.

See also

Cited sources