Description
This book is an erudite and elegiac exploration of Hindu nationalism in India today. It offers a revealing account of Hindu militant mobilizations as an authoritarian movement manifest throughout culture, polity, and economy, religion and law, class and caste, on gender, body, land, and memory. Tracing the continuities between Hindutva and Hindu cultural dominance, this book maps the architectures of civic and despotic governmentalities contouring Hindu nationalism in public, domestic, and everyday life. In chronicling concerted action against Christians and Muslims, Adivasis and Dalits, through spectacles, events, public executions, the riots in Kandhamal of December 2007 and August-September 2008, the planned, methodical politics of terror unfolds in its multiple registers. At the intersections of Anthropology, Postcolonial, Subaltern, and South Asia Studies, Angana P. Chatterji asks critical questions of nation making, cultural nationalism, and subaltern disenfranchisement. As a Foucauldian history of the present, this text asserts the role of ethical knowledge production as counter-memory.
CONTENTS
Gratitude
One: Memory-Mournings
Explanations
Text, Counter-Memory
Why Orissa?
Hindu Cultural Dominance, Hindutva/ization
Secularization
Biopolitics
Two: Dispositif
Roots
Stratagem
Nationscapes in Ascendancy
‘Paradesi’
‘Paraaya’
Normativity
Three: Impunity
Dislocation-IndoctriNation
Education
Governance
Economies of Violence
Dispossession
Struggles Over Land
Four: Erasures
In Jagatsinghpur, Jesus is the Son of a Subaltern God
Conversion/‘Re’conversion
‘Where Is Your God Now?’
Nation’s ‘Other’
A Collision of Histories
Five: Processions of Violence
Absences
Riots in Kandhamal, December 2007
‘Violent Gods’: Riots in Kandhamal, August 2008
Bibliography
Index
Angana P. Chatterji
A scholar, public intellectual, and educator, her work spans issues of post-colonial critique and counter-memory; militarization, gendered violences, and securitization as they contravene human rights; and religion in the public sphere as it shapes minoritization. She has also worked with issues of public forest lands reform, cultural survival, and customary and indigenous land rights. Chatterji was co-founder of the International People’s Tribunal on Human Rights and Justice in Kashmir.