Skip to main content
University of California Press

About the Book

I Too Have Some Dreams explores the work of N. M. Rashed, Urdu's renowned modernist poet, whose career spans the last years of British India and the early decades of postcolonial South Asia. A. Sean Pue argues that Rashed’s poetry carved out a distinct role for literature in the maintenance of doubt, providing a platform for challenging the certainty of collective ideologies and opposing the evolving forms of empire and domination. This finely crafted study offers a timely contribution to global modernist studies and to modern South Asian literary history.

About the Author

A. Sean Pue is Associate Professor of Hindi Language and South Asian Literature and Culture at Michigan State University.

From Our Blog

Poetry’s Transformative Power

Poetry can be powerful because it succinctly puts a voice to innermost feelings and can provide a dialogue for our experience. People tend to write poetry when in the midst of powerful emotions, using it to process questions, anxieties, grief, anger, and optimism, so this National Poetry Month we’re
Read More

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Note on Transliteration

Introduction

1. Embodiment
2. Position Without Identity
3. Allegory and Collectivity
4. Temporality

Conclusion: Hasan the Potter

Appendix: Poems in Transliteration and Translation

Notes
Bibliography
Index

Reviews

"I Too Have Some Dreams comes alive, offering engaging insights. . . . Through A. Sean Pue's discussion of verbal choices . . . we come to understand a little more about [N.M. Rashed's] work."
TLS