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Assignment #6 Secondary Sources By Srishti Lulla Use various card catalogs to identify the five BEST secondary source

books you can procure. These are not encyclopedias or reference sources. They are also not necessarily the first five sources you come across. You may want to find more than five, in case sources turn out to be hard to find/not useable. One way to find out more about a source and its relevance is to check for reviews/summaries on amazon.com or Google. In your source annotations, you can indicate to yourself if it a back-up source. Add your sources to your noodlebib and print out and attach. You want to include the most important sources on your topic and also a balanced perspective. Which libraries do you plan on visiting? Public Library: Weston Public Library University Library: MIT, Brandeis, UPenn ExtraArchives/Special Sources: Identify if there are any special resources you could use in your project: Historical archives, oral history interviews, museums, monuments, experts in the area. Are there college professors in Boston who specialize in your topic? Special collections? (ex. BC has an extensive Irish studies collection, visiting the Salem Archives on the Witch Trials) If you want to be competitive on a state or national level, you will most likely need at least one unique/hard to find source. You may not be able to identify a special source now, but keep it in the back of your mind. List ideas here: Interviews from grandparents about partition as they were there Interview Authors of books (mostly all college professors)

Assignment #6 Works Cited Chester, Lucy P. Borders and Conflict in South Asia : the Radcliffe Boundary Commission and the Partition of Punjab. Manchester: Manchester UP, 2009. Print. Didur, Jill. Unsettling Partition : Literature, Gender, Memory. Toronto: U of Toronto P, 2006. Print. Ganguly, Sumit. Conflict Unending: India-Pakistan Tensions since 1947. N.p.: Oxford UP, 2001. Print. Gopal, Priyamvada. The Indian English Novel : Nation, History, and Narration. Oxford: Oxford UP, 2009. Print. Hay, Jeff. The Partition of British India. New York: Chelsea HP, 2006. Print. Khan, Naveeda, ed. Beyond Crisis : Re-evaluating Pakistan. London: Routledge, 2010. Print. Khan, Nyla Ai. Islam, Women, and Violence in Kashmir : between India and Pakistan. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2010. Print. Khan, Yasmin. The Great Partition: The Making of India and Pakistan. N.p.: Yale UP, 2007. Print. Nair, Neeti. Changing Homelands : Hindu Politics and the Partition of India. Cambridge: Harvard UP, 2011. Print. Singh, Jaswant. Jinnah : India, Partition, Independence. Oxford: Oxford UP, 2010. Print. Talbot, Ian, and Gurharpal Singh. The Partition of India. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 2009. Print. Wainwright, Mary Doreen, and C. H. Phillips, eds. The Partition of India: Policies and Perspectives, 1935-1947. Cambridge: MIT P, 1970. Print. Wolpert, Stanley. India and Pakistan: Continued Conflict or Cooperation? Los Angeles: Regents of the U of California, 2010. Print.

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