"Imperi dell'Indo" è il resoconto dell'audace viaggio solitario lungo il "Fiume dei Fiumi", dalla foce alla sorgente, compiuto da Alice Albinia a ventinove anni: più di tremila chilometri attraverso paesi, panorami e popoli osservati con sguardo empatico, in un pellegrinaggio avventuroso fra tribù pashtun e fuoricasta metropolitani, santuari sufi e fondamentalisti islamici, fitto di incontri con memorabili personaggi il cui destino è fatalmente intrecciato a quello del grande fiume. Le sue rive "hanno attratto conquistatori assetati. Qui nacquero alcune delle prime città al mondo; la più antica letteratura sanscrita dell'India ebbe il fiume al suo centro; i santi predicatori dell'Islam peregrinarono lungo il suo corso". Un itinerario controcorrente e insieme a ritroso nel tempo - dal presente travagliato del Pakistan ai fasti dell'impero britannico, dalle conquiste dei sultani afghani ad Alessandro Magno, dall'epoca dei Veda a quella della misteriosa civiltà di Mohenjodaro -, raccontato con una scrittura lieve e incisiva in un libro che è insieme romanzo di viaggio e indagine storica, trattato di geografia umana e lucida riflessione sul subcontinente indiano di oggi.
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Empires of the Indus: The Story of a River is a non-fiction book by Alice Albinia published in 2008 by John Murray (publishing house). It is a part-memoir part-essay recount of Albinia’s Journey through Central and Southern Asia, following the course of the Indus River from Karachi to Tibet. Throughout the book, Albinia encounters and describes facets of culture and history, and relates them to the existence of the river. The book gives an insight into the communities as well as the history and political framework of the countries through which the Indus flows. Empires of the Indus was awarded the Jerwood Award by the Royal Society of Literature in 2005. The Indus River is a transboundary river more than 3000km long, originating north of the Himalayas, winding its way through Central and Southern Asia, and flowing into the sea in the province of Sindh, Pakistan. The history of human cultures and civilisations living alongside the river extends to at least 2300 BCE. Empires of the Indus is based primarily on Albinia’s own journeys along the Indus River in the early 2000s. Albinia uses the journey along the river to frame the relationships between the river, the populations that live alongside it, and the cultures and societal structures that have formed as a result. Albinia’s journey begins in Sindh, Pakistan, at the headwater of the Indus, and extends along the river’s course through Pakistan, India and Tibet, with forays into Afghanistan along the way. Due to the fraught political situation in Afghanistan and Pakistan at this time, Albinia pays particular attention to conflict and violence, contemporary and historical, occurring along the Indus. The content of the book is divided in 12 distinct sections, preceded by a preface. A map of the Indus river is given and several colour photographs. The book also has special sections named glossary, notes, select bibliography and an index. The glossary makes the book more understandable and comprehensible for readers not familiar with certain words and terms used in Pakistan, India and Tibet. |