This post is part of Reflecting on Imtiaz Habib’s Black Lives in the English Archives: An Online Symposium, organised and edited by Rebecca Adusei and Jamie Gemmell. The blog series is introduced here. The blog series was launched on Friday 19 Mary 2023 at the London Metropolitan Archives to tie in with their new ‘Unforgotten Lives’ exhibition.
Jyotsna G. Singh
Jyotsna G. Singh is Professor in the Department of English at Michigan State University.
Special thanks to Rebecca Adusei and Jamie Gemmell for generating “the multi-event symposium, bringing together scholars working at the forefront of early modern Black history and premodern race studies” to discuss the vital importance and continuing legacy of Imitiaz Habib’s path-breaking text. These non-competitive and generative scholarly conversations of the symposium (blogs) will, I hope, serve as a model for future exchanges committed to activism and social change.
Personal Reminiscences
Imtiaz Habib and I were regular SAA (Shakespeare Association of America) friends for many years, from the late 1990s onwards, till his untimely death in 2018. At every meeting we caught up with long chats, which in his native Bengali, one would call Adda – a popular term for “hangout,” or extended conversations among small groups, often verging into cerebral arguments, yet also producing a unique conviviality. We would often discuss the history of the Sub-continent, from the colonial period through the violent partitions and their lingering effects. Imtiaz’s memories stretched a generation before mine and he vividly recalled the birth of Bangladesh in violence, the assassination of Sheikh Mujib-Ur-Rehman and continuing national divisions. Thinking of him today, in that Adda modality, I imagine his happy bemusement and slight disbelief at the belated attention his book is currently receiving. He would be vigorously engaging with each blog post in the Symposium in his honor, approving, challenging, or even interrogating the different perspectives. We would all be enriched by his brilliance and critical rigor, but above all, by his intellectual generosity. Continue reading