The Un-Gandhian Gandhi - The Life and Afterlife of the Mahatma

The Un-Gandhian Gandhi - The Life and Afterlife of the Mahatma

Product ID: 12247

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Author: Claude Markovits
Translator(s): Claude Markovits
Publisher: Permanent Black
Year: 2004
Language: English
Pages: 173
ISBN/UPC (if available): 8178241552

Description

Although there have been many biographical accounts of Mahatma Gandhi, much of the literature on him is hagiographic. Keeping clear of the twin pitfall of hagiography and hyper-criticism, this book seeks to throw new light on Gandhi by looking simultaneously at his legend and career. The Gandhi legend is analyzed through the corpus of texts and images which helped spread it - through India and in the West.

The gradual creation of Gandhi as an icon is shown to be result of Indian nationalistic selectivity and Western Christian impoverishments of the range and depth of representations of the Mahatma. Markovits suggests that the growth of a legend on the saint as politician, thorough these iconic transformations, has obscured the facts of Gandhi's specific public career in history.

Gandhi's actual professional role in the public sphere, says Markovits, was marked by his long and critical phase of maturation in South Africa, a phase often glossed over, in laudatory account, as a preparation for his famous work in India. This later Indian career, Markovits points out, was really the consequence of Gandhi having to radically reinvent himself, even as he worked his way through political ground realities to create what we now know as the quintessence of Gandhian politics.

The attempt made here is thus to revaluate some crucial points within Gandhi's career and sometimes ambivalent ideological positions. Markovits argues that the disjunctions between the early and later Gandhi cannot be wished away or elided: they need to be squarely examined.

Rather than seeing Gandhi as an upholder of traditional Indian values, Markovits stresses the paradoxical modernity of Gandhi's anti-modernism. What comes out strongly, in the end, is Gandhi as a polysemic figure, open to different, even contradictory, interpretations, whose peculiar modernity and susceptibility to varying appropriations makes him of enduring contemporary value.

Contents

Preface

INTRODUCTION

PERCEPTION OF GANDHI
Images of Gandhi
The Impossible Biography of Mohandas K Gandhi
Gandhi's Posthumous Life

GANDHI IN HISTORY
Birth of a Leader
Gandhi and Indian Independence
Gandhi and Indian Society
Gandhi in the Ti