The Romance of the State
And the Fate of Dissent in the Tropics
Price: 495.00 INR
ISBN:
9780195693331
Publication date:
17/10/2007
Paperback
232 pages
216x140mm
Price: 495.00 INR
ISBN:
9780195693331
Publication date:
17/10/2007
Paperback
232 pages
Ashis Nandy
Rights: World Rights
Ashis Nandy
Description
The essays in this volume written as part of psychological biography of the Indian state, explore the scope, limits, and fate of some key concepts in the mainstream culture of politics that have come to structure Indias public life. These concepts constitute the dominant public ideology within the consciousness of the expanding middle classes in the country and they range from concrete concerns like secularism and development to more abstract ones such as dissent and history. The essays, mostly inquire into the culture of the Indian state, suggest tangentially the directions in which to move for a cultural and psychological biography of the state. The idea of a moderate state, which was of a state that was neither over-burdened with the responsibility of engineering all aspects of its citizens lives nor of seeking to extend the market and global capital into every corner of every society, was not unknown to all societies at all times. While such moderate states may not have been great successes and may not have survived, neither can the modern nation-state system claim to be the greatest success story of all times. The question of its survival as an arrangement of political communities, too, remains to be finally decided. The essays in this book explore the vicissitudes of the idea of the modern state under different cultural and psychological conditions.
About the author
Ashis Nandy, Senior Fellow, Centre for the Study of Developing Societies, New DelhiAshis Nandy
Table of contents
Preface
Part One
1:The State: The Fate of a Concept
2:Culture, State and the Rediscovery of Indian Politics
Part Two
3:An Anti-Secularist Manifesto
4:The Twilight of Certitudes: Secularism, Hindu Nationalism and Other Masks of Deculturation
5:Historys Forgotten Doubles
6:State, History, and Exile in South Asian Politics: Modernity and the Landscape of Clandestine and Incommunicable Selves
7:Terrorism-Indian Style: The Birth of a Political Issue in a Populist Democracy
Part Three
8:Culture, Voice, and Development: A Primer for the Unsuspecting
9:Development and Violence
10:The Scope and Limits of Dissent: Indias First Modern Environmentalist and His Critique of the DVC
Index
Ashis Nandy
Description
The essays in this volume written as part of psychological biography of the Indian state, explore the scope, limits, and fate of some key concepts in the mainstream culture of politics that have come to structure Indias public life. These concepts constitute the dominant public ideology within the consciousness of the expanding middle classes in the country and they range from concrete concerns like secularism and development to more abstract ones such as dissent and history. The essays, mostly inquire into the culture of the Indian state, suggest tangentially the directions in which to move for a cultural and psychological biography of the state. The idea of a moderate state, which was of a state that was neither over-burdened with the responsibility of engineering all aspects of its citizens lives nor of seeking to extend the market and global capital into every corner of every society, was not unknown to all societies at all times. While such moderate states may not have been great successes and may not have survived, neither can the modern nation-state system claim to be the greatest success story of all times. The question of its survival as an arrangement of political communities, too, remains to be finally decided. The essays in this book explore the vicissitudes of the idea of the modern state under different cultural and psychological conditions.
About the author
Ashis Nandy, Senior Fellow, Centre for the Study of Developing Societies, New DelhiTable of contents
Preface
Part One
1:The State: The Fate of a Concept
2:Culture, State and the Rediscovery of Indian Politics
Part Two
3:An Anti-Secularist Manifesto
4:The Twilight of Certitudes: Secularism, Hindu Nationalism and Other Masks of Deculturation
5:Historys Forgotten Doubles
6:State, History, and Exile in South Asian Politics: Modernity and the Landscape of Clandestine and Incommunicable Selves
7:Terrorism-Indian Style: The Birth of a Political Issue in a Populist Democracy
Part Three
8:Culture, Voice, and Development: A Primer for the Unsuspecting
9:Development and Violence
10:The Scope and Limits of Dissent: Indias First Modern Environmentalist and His Critique of the DVC
Index
Multiculturalism, Liberalism and Democracy
Rajeev Bhargava, Amiya Kumar Bagchi, R. Sudarshan
Billionaires in World Politics
Peter Hägel
An Enquiry Concerning Political Justice
William Godwin, Mark Philp
Explanation and Understanding in the Human Sciences
Gurpreet Mahajan
Class and Inequality in China and India, 1950–2010
Vamsi Vakulabharanam
Politics and Ethics of the Indian Constitution
Rajeev Bhargava

