A Biography of the Indian Nation: 1947-1997

A Biography of the Indian Nation: 1947-1997

Product ID: 8946

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Author: Ranabir Samaddar
Publisher: Sage Publications
Year: 2001
Language: English
Pages: 342
ISBN/UPC (if available): 0761995196

Description

This volume offers an elegant and lucid analysis of a complex and dynamic process, delineating a theory of Indian nationalism that is not only unique in its approach but exhaustive in its scope.

What makes a nation a nation? ‘A Biography of the Indian Nation’ contextualizes this question in a uniquely new paradigm by concentrating on the post-colonial phase rather than the colonial period of Indian history in charting the evolution of Indian nationalism. It gives primacy to politics rather than concentrating merely on historicism and cultural analysis. As professor Samaddar argues, it is only with the assumption of state power that the nationalist journey in India can be said to have begun in earnest. He focuses on encounters between the Indian nation and its myriad ‘constituents’—rebels, communities, citizens and aliens – as well as with democracy, both conceptually and practically.

Beginning with a retrospective look at a critical event – the partitioning of India – through which an ‘inadequate’ nation became ‘adequate’, the first chapter examines the theme which underpins the entire volume: the forms and theatres of adjustment and readjustment central to the evolution of Indian nationhood. Revolutions, passive revolutions, and other defining tools of nationality – including territoriality, citizenship, federality, and war and peace – are thus located logically in the context of ‘nationality’. The second and third chapters chronicle the attempts at rebellion, especially peasant and student rebellions, and their subsequent defeat, while the fourth looks at the twin jeopardizes of caste and communalism and the nation’s attempt to take them. The next chapter deals with India’s elections as an account of a nation legitimized, while Professor Samaddar argues in the sixth chapter that the recognition of the nation’s two subjects – the citizen and the alien – as well as of the notion of borders and of transborder flows is integral to defining a theory of citizenship. In the seventh chapter, the autobiographies of three women are used to demonstrate how domesticity becomes crucial for a nation to become complete by arranging the public space within which nationalist politics operates. The last chapter deals with war without which, the author demonstrates, no nation can become a nation.

The volume offers an elegant and lucid analysis of a complex and dynamic process, delineating a theory of Indian nationalism that is not only unique in its approach but exhaustive in its scope. Essential reading for theorists and scholars in the fields of political science, history, sociology and governance, this book by and erudite and sensitive scholar will also be of considerable interest to the lay reader.

Contents

Preface and Acknowledgements

CHAPTER I
The Birth of a Nation

CHAPTER II
Promises of Revolution

CHAPTER III
The Dynamics of Passive Revolution

CHAPTER IV
Nation Jeopardised

CHAPTER V
Nation Legitimised

CHAPTER VI
The Nation’s Two Subjects

CHAPTER VII
Nation and the Home

CHAPTER VIII
Nation at War, Nation at Peace

Bibliography
Index
About the Author