India and the Unthinkable

Backwaters Collective on Metaphysics and Politics

Price: 850.00 

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ISBN:

9780199466863

Publication date:

24/06/2016

Hardback

276 pages

Price: 850.00 

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:

9780199466863

Publication date:

24/06/2016

Hardback

276 pages

Vinay Lal, Roby Rajan

A remarkable but little commented on feature of the various discourses on ‘India’ circulating today is the near total absence of its metaphysical heritage as a source of illumination into our contemporary condition. The central claim of this book is that this heritage has an autonomy of its own that is not subsumable under any other purportedly ‘larger’ concept; and that furthermore, if we ever hope to break out of our thralldom to the reigning hegemonic—but rather bankrupt—vision of humanity’s future, we must squarely confront the full consequences of this fateful evasion of the heritage.

Rights:  World Rights

Vinay Lal, Roby Rajan

Description

The modern understanding of India has been structured around a standard set of oppositions—tradition versus modernity, faith versus secularism, bhakti versus jnana, precolonial versus colonial, Sanskritic versus vernacular, to name a few. This book by the Backwaters Collective probes the disavowal that lurks behind these familiar pairs, and explores how we might be able to move beyond them into the realm of the ‘unthinkable’.
A closely related concern of the Collective is to safeguard the practices, ideas, and norms that inform the everyday life and common sense of the culture so as to foster the broader goal of an ecological plurality of knowledges. How might the intellectual and cultural resources of Indic civilization be deployed to understand our contemporary world in the face of the grave threat posed by the homogenizing system of global knowledge? Our sense of the temporal is now captured almost entirely by ‘history’, just as the idea of ‘development’ has hijacked what could otherwise be a more open-ended vision of the future.
The authors in this volume are united in the belief that the time has come to confront such questions frontally, no matter how unsettling that may be to our vaunted notions about ourselves.

About the Editor

Vinay Lal is Professor of History and Asian-American Studies at the University of California-Los Angeles (UCLA) and has written widely on modern Indian history, colonialism, the worldwide Indian diaspora, the politics of knowledge systems, public and popular culture in India, American politics, and the moral and political thought of Gandhi.
Roby Rajan is Professor at the University of Wisconsin-Parkside and has published internationally in a wide variety of disciplines including operations research, economic theory, game theory, Marxist theory, and aesthetic theory.

Vinay Lal, Roby Rajan

Table of contents


Preface: Civilizational Dialogues and the Politics of a Collective
Vinay Lal
Acknowledgements
Vinay Lal and Roby Rajan
Introduction: Post-metaphysics and the Future of an Illusion
Roby Rajan

1. Is Metaphysics Political?
Sundar Sarukkai
2. A Disowned Father of the Nation in India: Vinayak Damodar Savarkar and the Demonic and the Seductive in Indian Nationalism
Ashis Nandy
3. Backwater Disclosure: Ontological Politics and the Dialectics of Intercommunality
Roby Rajan
4. The Politics and Metaphysics of Intellectual Practices: Ashis Nandy and U. R. Ananthamurthy in Conversation
Edited and annotated by Vinay Lal
5. ‘A Marriage Made in Heaven’? How Metaphysics Transforms Politics: A Case Study
Julius Lipner
6. The Transmutation of Metaphysics and Politics in Literature
N. Manu Chakravarthy
7. Moving in the Double Bind: Reconfiguring Indian Reflective and Creative Traditions Today
D. Venkat Rao
8. ‘Unarv’: The Poetic Factor in Metaphysics and Politics
M. C. Dinakaran and Anish Damodaran

Notes on Contributors
Index

Vinay Lal, Roby Rajan

Vinay Lal, Roby Rajan

Vinay Lal, Roby Rajan

Description

The modern understanding of India has been structured around a standard set of oppositions—tradition versus modernity, faith versus secularism, bhakti versus jnana, precolonial versus colonial, Sanskritic versus vernacular, to name a few. This book by the Backwaters Collective probes the disavowal that lurks behind these familiar pairs, and explores how we might be able to move beyond them into the realm of the ‘unthinkable’.
A closely related concern of the Collective is to safeguard the practices, ideas, and norms that inform the everyday life and common sense of the culture so as to foster the broader goal of an ecological plurality of knowledges. How might the intellectual and cultural resources of Indic civilization be deployed to understand our contemporary world in the face of the grave threat posed by the homogenizing system of global knowledge? Our sense of the temporal is now captured almost entirely by ‘history’, just as the idea of ‘development’ has hijacked what could otherwise be a more open-ended vision of the future.
The authors in this volume are united in the belief that the time has come to confront such questions frontally, no matter how unsettling that may be to our vaunted notions about ourselves.

About the Editor

Vinay Lal is Professor of History and Asian-American Studies at the University of California-Los Angeles (UCLA) and has written widely on modern Indian history, colonialism, the worldwide Indian diaspora, the politics of knowledge systems, public and popular culture in India, American politics, and the moral and political thought of Gandhi.
Roby Rajan is Professor at the University of Wisconsin-Parkside and has published internationally in a wide variety of disciplines including operations research, economic theory, game theory, Marxist theory, and aesthetic theory.

Table of contents


Preface: Civilizational Dialogues and the Politics of a Collective
Vinay Lal
Acknowledgements
Vinay Lal and Roby Rajan
Introduction: Post-metaphysics and the Future of an Illusion
Roby Rajan

1. Is Metaphysics Political?
Sundar Sarukkai
2. A Disowned Father of the Nation in India: Vinayak Damodar Savarkar and the Demonic and the Seductive in Indian Nationalism
Ashis Nandy
3. Backwater Disclosure: Ontological Politics and the Dialectics of Intercommunality
Roby Rajan
4. The Politics and Metaphysics of Intellectual Practices: Ashis Nandy and U. R. Ananthamurthy in Conversation
Edited and annotated by Vinay Lal
5. ‘A Marriage Made in Heaven’? How Metaphysics Transforms Politics: A Case Study
Julius Lipner
6. The Transmutation of Metaphysics and Politics in Literature
N. Manu Chakravarthy
7. Moving in the Double Bind: Reconfiguring Indian Reflective and Creative Traditions Today
D. Venkat Rao
8. ‘Unarv’: The Poetic Factor in Metaphysics and Politics
M. C. Dinakaran and Anish Damodaran

Notes on Contributors
Index