Identity & Religion - Foundations of Anti-Islamism in India

Identity & Religion - Foundations of Anti-Islamism in India

Product ID: 13799

Regular price
$24.35
Sale price
$24.35
Regular price
Sold out
Unit price
per 
Shipping calculated at checkout.

Shipping Note: This item usually arrives at your doorstep in 10-15 days

Author: Amalendu Misra
Publisher: Sage Publications
Year: 2004
Language: English
Pages: 262
ISBN/UPC (if available): 0761932275

Description

In spite of several hundred years of Muslim presence in India and the close interaction between Hindus and Muslims, the majority of Hindus remain uncomfortable with their Islamic past. As a consequence, most of the seem to have considerable difficulty in integrating the huge contribution of Islam in their historical construction of India's national identity. This book looks at the reasons behind this discomfort and argues that the continuing resentment towards Muslims can be linked to a bias in the Indian nationalist tradition.

Amalendu Misra shows that while some eminent nationalist leaders were implacably hostile to Muslims, even wholly secular ones were uneasy with India's Muslims, even wholly secular ones were uneasy with India's Muslim past and had a generally unfavorable disposition towards both Muslims and Islam. The book explicates this by focusing on the writings of Vivekananda, Gandhi, Nehru and Savarkar supported by a wealth of examples from a wide range of contexts. It argues that the views of these four prominent individuals were heavily shaped by British historiography as well as their respective visions of independent India.

This skewed nationalist interpretation of the role of Muslims in India, maintains the author, is what lies beneath the current state of estrangement between Hindus and Muslims. Further, the essentially anti-Islamic attitude of India's elite tips largely the result of the legacy of these four thinkers. He goes on to suggest how modern India needs to redefine itself to flourish as a genuinely secular democracy.

Topical, lucid and thought-provoking, this well-researched account of an important but hitherto little understood basis of Hindu-Muslim tension will attract a wide readership among historians, sociologist and political scientists. It will also interest those concerned with the wider issues of ethnicity, religion, communal politics, and the state of India's polity today.

REVIEWS

A sensitive and intelligent account of the Indian nationalist thought and the difficulties it faced in doing justice to India's Islamic inheritance.

-Lord Parekh
FBA, Centennial Professor, London School of Economics

A thoughtful, well researched and original analysis of the nationalist conceptualization of the Muslim presence in India.

-Noel O'Sullivan
Professor of Political Philosophy, University of Hull

Contents

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

INTRODUCTION

Vivekananda's Hindu Regeneration Project

Gandhi and Political Hinduism

Nehru-the Sceptical Secularist

Savarkar's Discourse on Radical Ethno-Nationalism

The Legacy of British Historiography

Conclusion : The Manifest Destiny

Glossary

Bibliography

Index

About the Author