Narrative and Nation: Literature and Identity explores how literature functions as witness to trauma, transformation, and the construction of national and cultural identities. The work examines how storytelling shapes understanding of historical events, social movements, and collective memory across diverse nations and cultures. Coverage includes literary representations of war, partition, displacement, and generational memory through narrative analysis. The book investigates how literature reflects and constructs national identity, examining postcolonial narratives, indigenous literature, and transnational perspectives. Topics address the relationship between narrative and collective trauma, memory work, and cultural resilience. Designed for literature students, scholars, and educators, this comprehensive work provides frameworks for analyzing how literature engages with nation, identity, and historical consciousness while exploring narrative's role in shaping cultural understanding. Research frameworks and analytical approaches support literary interpretation.