Fractured Tales

Invisibles in Indian Democracy

Price: 650.00 

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ISBN:

9780199466283

Publication date:

07/10/2016

Hardback

200 pages

Price: 650.00 

We sell our titles through other companies
Disclaimer :You will be redirected to a third party website.The sole responsibility of supplies, condition of the product, availability of stock, date of delivery, mode of payment will be as promised by the said third party only. Prices and specifications may vary from the OUP India site.

ISBN:

9780199466283

Publication date:

07/10/2016

Hardback

200 pages

Badri Narayan

Fractured Tales documents narratives of the voiceless and invisible dalit castes that have been left out in the 60 years of state-led Indian democracy. Exploring the deepening of democracy among the dalits of Uttar Pradesh, it argues that the process of democratization of these communities over-represents some groups such as the Chamars and Pasis while neglecting others like the Musahar, Bansphor, and Sapera communities.

Rights:  World Rights

Badri Narayan

Description

There are two ways of looking at democracy. One is the view of the state, policymakers, and so on, which shows the dissemination and spread of democracy in statistical terms. The other view is the one from the bottom. This view helps us understand and grapple with the reality of the spread of democracy, and enables us to observe the groups and communities excluded from the process of democratic empowerment.
Fractured Tales documents narratives of the voiceless and invisible dalit castes that have been left out in the 60 years of state-led Indian democracy. Exploring the deepening of democracy among the dalits of Uttar Pradesh, it argues that the process of democratization of these communities over-represents some groups such as the Chamars and Pasis while neglecting others like the Musahar, Bansphor, and Sapera communities. These ‘invisible’ communities are unable to assert their presence in the ever-evolving political contestation between multiple marginal groups. Delving into the politics of visibility, empowerment, and exclusion, the author captures the growing sense of disillusionment among marginalized dalit communities.

About the Author

Badri Narayan
is Professor, Centre for the Study of Discrimination and Exclusion, School of Social Sciences, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi.

Badri Narayan

Table of contents


Preface
Introduction: Tracing Invisibles

1. A Beggar’s Song of Democracy
2. Is It a Snake or a Rope? Democracy and Identity Politics in India
3. Democracy, Deprivation, and Dispossession: Multiple Narratives of Democracy in North India
4. Margins and Politics: Narratives of Marginalized Dalit Castes
5. With History and Without History: Dalit Reinvention of the Past
6. Culture and Representation: The Making of Public Culture

Conclusion

Bibliography
Index
About the Author

Badri Narayan

Features

  • The work focuses on the marginalized of the marginalized within dalit communities.
  • Written in an engaging style, this work can be accessible to a wider readership interested in the politics of the marginalized.
  • This work is lucid in its understanding of the complexity of the democratic discourse in the state of Uttar Pradesh, India.

Badri Narayan

Badri Narayan

Description

There are two ways of looking at democracy. One is the view of the state, policymakers, and so on, which shows the dissemination and spread of democracy in statistical terms. The other view is the one from the bottom. This view helps us understand and grapple with the reality of the spread of democracy, and enables us to observe the groups and communities excluded from the process of democratic empowerment.
Fractured Tales documents narratives of the voiceless and invisible dalit castes that have been left out in the 60 years of state-led Indian democracy. Exploring the deepening of democracy among the dalits of Uttar Pradesh, it argues that the process of democratization of these communities over-represents some groups such as the Chamars and Pasis while neglecting others like the Musahar, Bansphor, and Sapera communities. These ‘invisible’ communities are unable to assert their presence in the ever-evolving political contestation between multiple marginal groups. Delving into the politics of visibility, empowerment, and exclusion, the author captures the growing sense of disillusionment among marginalized dalit communities.

About the Author

Badri Narayan
is Professor, Centre for the Study of Discrimination and Exclusion, School of Social Sciences, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi.

Table of contents


Preface
Introduction: Tracing Invisibles

1. A Beggar’s Song of Democracy
2. Is It a Snake or a Rope? Democracy and Identity Politics in India
3. Democracy, Deprivation, and Dispossession: Multiple Narratives of Democracy in North India
4. Margins and Politics: Narratives of Marginalized Dalit Castes
5. With History and Without History: Dalit Reinvention of the Past
6. Culture and Representation: The Making of Public Culture

Conclusion

Bibliography
Index
About the Author