Why Mohammed Hanif uses satire to write about Pakistan

· Scroll

Based on the 1988 aircraft crash that killed Zia-ul-Haq, the military dictator of Pakistan, A Case of Exploding Mangoes made a big splash in the South Asian literary world when it was released in 2008. Readers loved a writer from the subcontinent nailing political satire.

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Since then Mohammed Hanif has written three more novels, masterfully blending politics and the absurdities of life. He’s so captured the genre that some say he’s the Pakistani Joseph Heller.

Hanif has a new book out, The Rebel English Academy.

On Scroll Adda, he talks about why he uses satire, his relationship with three languages – Punjabi, Urdu and English – how Operation Sindoor ended up strengthening army rule in Pakistan, and how Imran Khan is a political prisoner.

Host: Shoaib Daniyal

Producer: Priyali Dhingra

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