An eminent Punjabi writer of the twentieth century, Sant Singh Sekhon (1908-97) excelled in most literary genres - drama, fiction and prose alike. He was also the founder of critical theory and literary criticism in Punjabi literature. As a historian of Punjabi literature he is unmatched.
In the 1950s, when Sekhon began grappling elaborately with the problematic of Punjab through the prism of Sikh history, he embarked on its representation by making diachronic as well as synchronic departures with the narrative of the earlier writings on Sikh history. The impulse behind the writing of the earlier work was the urge to see Punjab- and by implication the country- free from the colonial rule.
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