In Bangladesh, a society grapples with its identity after autocracy

In the aftermath of revolutions, when something new rises from the ruins of crumbled governments or discredited ideas, history – as William Carlos Williams wrote – “should be a left hand to us, as of a violinist,” finding the notes from which improvisations are built.

So it is now in Bangladesh. The South Asian country emerged last summer from 15 years of increasingly autocratic rule through a student-led revolt over lack of economic opportunity. Less than a year later, as Simon Montlake reports in our May 12 Monitor Weekly cover story, its diverse ethnic and religious communities are engaged in a vibrant contest over the national narrative and what kind of country they hope to build.

New school textbooks have replaced old ones that vaunted the now-vanquished. Statues have fallen. So have some of the country’s foundational myths.

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