Spectacular Politics Performative Nation-Building and Religion in Modern India |
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Author:
| Six, Clemens |
ISBN: | 978-81-7304-886-9 |
Publication Date: | Jul 2010 |
Publisher: | Manohar Publications
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Book Format: | Paperback |
List Price: | USD $67.95 |
Book Description:
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How does one explain the historical processes through which abstract ideas such as the idea of a nation become a motivation for mass mobilisation, political re-organisation and even violence on a large scale? This book seeks to find answers to this question in the context of India's modern history during its long eventful twentieth century. Starting from the early stages of Gandhian mass mobilisation after the First World War and subsequently proceeding to more recent examples of...
More DescriptionHow does one explain the historical processes through which abstract ideas such as the idea of a nation become a motivation for mass mobilisation, political re-organisation and even violence on a large scale? This book seeks to find answers to this question in the context of India's modern history during its long eventful twentieth century. Starting from the early stages of Gandhian mass mobilisation after the First World War and subsequently proceeding to more recent examples of Hindu-nationalism, the book analyses spectacular politics' as a distinct form of political communication. It thereby seeks to understand not only how the idea of the nation turned into the most powerful political idea in modern India, but also how political communication and mobilisation work in an extremely heterogeneous and fragmented society. As Indian society becomes more and more involved globalisation and internationalisation, many seemingly self-evident paradigms of India's self-understanding such as its national identity, democracy, or secularism are once again subject to intense political controversies and social confrontations. Finally the example of religiously motivated terrorism illustrates the profound ambivalence of performative politics between inclusive, even participatory effects on the one hand and destabilising, even destructive consequences of those political discourses, which emphasise their form as much as their content.