Gandhian Nonviolent Struggle and Untouchability in South India

The 1924–25 Vykom Satyagraha and The Mechanisms Of Change

Price: 1100.00 

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ISBN:

9780199452668

Publication date:

27/01/2015

Hardback

368 pages

216x140mm

Price: 1100.00 

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:

9780199452668

Publication date:

27/01/2015

Hardback

368 pages

Mary Elizabeth King

Through an analysis of the twenty-month-long Gandhian satyagraha (nonviolent resistance) against untouchability at Vykom, Kerala, in the mid-1920s, this book explores new approaches to the understanding and practice of civil resistance as the application of social power.

Rights:  World Rights

Mary Elizabeth King

Description

In the 1920s, in the south Indian village of Vykom, a nonviolent struggle sought to open to everyone the roads surrounding the Brahmin temple there. For centuries, any person or animal could walk those roads but not the so-called untouchable Hindus, whose use of the roads would “pollute” the high castes. From April 1924 to November 1925, Gandhi waged a satyagraha to put an end to this blatant discrimination.  Gandhi believed that the Vykom struggle would eliminate severe practices of untouchability, unapproachability, and unseeability, as the nonviolent activists would “convert” the high castes “by sheer force of character and suffering.” Within a decade of the Vykom campaign, a narrative emerged that corroborated Gandhi’s beliefs and cited the success of the satyagraha as testimony to his methods. This mythic narrative has persisted to this day; yet fresh evidence presented by King shows that Gandhi’s confidence was misguided, and the volunteers’ suffering was ineffective in “converting” the upper-caste orthodoxy. This book for the first time explores what actually happened at Vykom, including its controversial settlement. Correcting misunderstandings, it addresses the rarity of conversion as a mechanism of change, and evaluates shortcomings of Gandhi’s leadership. 

Mary Elizabeth King

Table of contents

Contents
 
List of figures and Maps                                     
Foreword by Bhikhu Parekh                              
Preface                                                              
Acknowledgments                                             
 
Introduction                                                        
 
Chapter 1 Travancore Society: Early Stirrings of Organized Opposition against Caste                
 
Chapter 2 The Ezhava Community Awakens  
Chapter 3 The Satyagraha
 
Chapter 4 The Maharani Regent and Travancore Governmental Change
 
Chapter 5 The Settlement              
 Chapter 6 The Vykom Compromise: Gandhi's Role and Broader Implications
 
Chapter 7 Impact of Vykom on a Tool in International Theory
Chapter 8 An Historic Campaign Holds Contemporary Lessons
 
Conclusion          
 
Glossary
 
Appendix I Timeline
Appendix II Mechanisms of Change
 
Select Bibliography
 
Index
 

About the Author 

Mary Elizabeth King

Mary Elizabeth King

Mary Elizabeth King

Description

In the 1920s, in the south Indian village of Vykom, a nonviolent struggle sought to open to everyone the roads surrounding the Brahmin temple there. For centuries, any person or animal could walk those roads but not the so-called untouchable Hindus, whose use of the roads would “pollute” the high castes. From April 1924 to November 1925, Gandhi waged a satyagraha to put an end to this blatant discrimination.  Gandhi believed that the Vykom struggle would eliminate severe practices of untouchability, unapproachability, and unseeability, as the nonviolent activists would “convert” the high castes “by sheer force of character and suffering.” Within a decade of the Vykom campaign, a narrative emerged that corroborated Gandhi’s beliefs and cited the success of the satyagraha as testimony to his methods. This mythic narrative has persisted to this day; yet fresh evidence presented by King shows that Gandhi’s confidence was misguided, and the volunteers’ suffering was ineffective in “converting” the upper-caste orthodoxy. This book for the first time explores what actually happened at Vykom, including its controversial settlement. Correcting misunderstandings, it addresses the rarity of conversion as a mechanism of change, and evaluates shortcomings of Gandhi’s leadership. 

Table of contents

Contents
 
List of figures and Maps                                     
Foreword by Bhikhu Parekh                              
Preface                                                              
Acknowledgments                                             
 
Introduction                                                        
 
Chapter 1 Travancore Society: Early Stirrings of Organized Opposition against Caste                
 
Chapter 2 The Ezhava Community Awakens  
Chapter 3 The Satyagraha
 
Chapter 4 The Maharani Regent and Travancore Governmental Change
 
Chapter 5 The Settlement              
 Chapter 6 The Vykom Compromise: Gandhi's Role and Broader Implications
 
Chapter 7 Impact of Vykom on a Tool in International Theory
Chapter 8 An Historic Campaign Holds Contemporary Lessons
 
Conclusion          
 
Glossary
 
Appendix I Timeline
Appendix II Mechanisms of Change
 
Select Bibliography
 
Index
 

About the Author