Subalterns and Sovereigns

An Anthropological History of Bastar (1854-2006)

Price: 550.00 INR

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ISBN:

9780195697049

Publication date:

14/05/2008

Paperback

380 pages

216x140mm

Price: 550.00 INR

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:

9780195697049

Publication date:

14/05/2008

Paperback

380 pages

Second Edition Edition

Nandini Sundar

The most comprehensive account on the new state of Chattisgarh,The author is a known authority on Chattisgarh. She is also on many state committees and international forums related to the new state

Rights:  World Rights

Second Edition Edition

Nandini Sundar

Description

Subalterns and Sovereigns traces the expansion of the colonial and the post-colonial state in Bastar, central India between 1854-2006, In particular, it looks at the manner in which the state was constituted, focusing on certain critical moments when the structures set into place by the colonial state were contested. The central themes include the growing restrictions on popular access to land and forest, and the changing popular notions of kingship and polity, which act as the matrix through which structures of resistance are defined.
The author's account of the region is at once the outcome of an intellectual as well as personal encounter with the 'field'. It is divided into three parts: Section One, 'Recreated Pasts', portrays the pre-colonial economy and polity. It dispels notions of dominant history that see Bastar and other such places as untouched and isolated prior to colonialism, showing instead, the degree of social and political fluidity in the region in the pre-colonial period.
Section 2, 'Rebellious Pasts', contains accounts of both 'major' and 'minor' resistance to the colonizing process. It throws light on the play of multiple histories, differently constructed and differently understood by the actors involved.
The final section, ' Uncertain Futures', highlights the contradictions faced by tribal society today and the processes of cultural redefinition engendered by these contradictions. The second edition includes an Afterword which discusses contemporary issues concerning the formation of the state of Chattisgarh.


About the author

Nandini Sundar, Professor of Sociology, Delhi School of Economics, University of Delhi

Second Edition Edition

Nandini Sundar

Table of contents

Acknowledgements
Prologue
List of Maps
List of Tables
List of Photographs
List of Illustrations
Abbreviations
Introduction
Recreated pasts
1:Village Histories in south Bastar
2:The Dialectics of Dussehra: Raja and Praja in the Bastar Polity
Rebellious Pasts
3:We are Yours, but the Land is Ours: Kingship Contested
4:How did the Land become so Bitter?
5:In Search of Gunda Dhur: The Bhumkal of 1910
6:The Tribal Question, 19271950
7:The Congress and the King
8:The Baba and the Bhagats, Uncertain Futures
Conclusion
9:Afterword
Glossary of Terms
Bibliography
Index

Second Edition Edition

Nandini Sundar

Second Edition Edition

Nandini Sundar

Second Edition Edition

Nandini Sundar

Description

Subalterns and Sovereigns traces the expansion of the colonial and the post-colonial state in Bastar, central India between 1854-2006, In particular, it looks at the manner in which the state was constituted, focusing on certain critical moments when the structures set into place by the colonial state were contested. The central themes include the growing restrictions on popular access to land and forest, and the changing popular notions of kingship and polity, which act as the matrix through which structures of resistance are defined.
The author's account of the region is at once the outcome of an intellectual as well as personal encounter with the 'field'. It is divided into three parts: Section One, 'Recreated Pasts', portrays the pre-colonial economy and polity. It dispels notions of dominant history that see Bastar and other such places as untouched and isolated prior to colonialism, showing instead, the degree of social and political fluidity in the region in the pre-colonial period.
Section 2, 'Rebellious Pasts', contains accounts of both 'major' and 'minor' resistance to the colonizing process. It throws light on the play of multiple histories, differently constructed and differently understood by the actors involved.
The final section, ' Uncertain Futures', highlights the contradictions faced by tribal society today and the processes of cultural redefinition engendered by these contradictions. The second edition includes an Afterword which discusses contemporary issues concerning the formation of the state of Chattisgarh.


About the author

Nandini Sundar, Professor of Sociology, Delhi School of Economics, University of Delhi

Table of contents

Acknowledgements
Prologue
List of Maps
List of Tables
List of Photographs
List of Illustrations
Abbreviations
Introduction
Recreated pasts
1:Village Histories in south Bastar
2:The Dialectics of Dussehra: Raja and Praja in the Bastar Polity
Rebellious Pasts
3:We are Yours, but the Land is Ours: Kingship Contested
4:How did the Land become so Bitter?
5:In Search of Gunda Dhur: The Bhumkal of 1910
6:The Tribal Question, 19271950
7:The Congress and the King
8:The Baba and the Bhagats, Uncertain Futures
Conclusion
9:Afterword
Glossary of Terms
Bibliography
Index