Cartography of fear
Why this matters: local context for readers following news across Pakistan and the region.
SOUTH Asia is a cradle of ancient civilizations, a land where cultures, languages and histories have interwoven for millennia. Yet beneath this richness lies a quieter, more persistent reality: a lingering psychological unease that shapes how millions perceive the world and themselves. This unease is not merely the residue of contemporary political tensions or periodic outbreaks of conflict. It is also the inheritance of a longer historical experience, particularly the colonial encounter that reshaped the region’s geography, institutions and even its mental frameworks. The British colonial order did not merely govern South Asia; it reorganized it through measurement, classification and control. Land was surveyed with unprecedented precision, rivers and mountains mapped and vast territories reduced to administrative units defined by lines on paper. Census operations and administrative categories further deepened this transformation, as communities were classified by religion, caste, language and occupation, turning fluid identities into fixed and rigid labels over time. This legacy was reinforced by modern border-making. The Durand Line in 1893 and the Radcliffe Line in 1947 were not just cartographic decisions but ruptures in lived reality. Families, tribes and communities were divided overnight, as continuous cultural landscapes were fractured by administrative necessity. The Partition, in particular, left enduring scars through mass displacement, communal violence and the breakdown of coexistence. Within this historical context, contemporary mental distress in South Asia reflects more than present-day conflict. Chronic insecurity and heightened alertness echo accumulated historical experience. As psychiatrist Dr. Khalid Mufti notes, prolonged exposure to uncertainty can produce persistent hyper-vigilance, where even peace is filtered through anticipated threat, sustaining cycles of anxiety and mistrust. Modern media ecosystems have intensified this condition. News