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Notions of Nationhood in Bengal: Perspectives on Samaj, c. 1867-1905

Author : Swarupa Gupta
Publisher : BRILL
Page : 424 pages
File Size : 35,28 MB
Release : 2009-06-24
Category : Philosophy
ISBN : 9047429583

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This book reopens the debate on colonial nationalisms, going beyond ‘derivative’, ‘borrowed’, political and modernist paradigms. It introduces the conceptual category of samaj to demonstrate how indigenous socio-cultural origins in Bengal interacted with late-colonial discourses to produce the notion of a nation. Samaj (a historical society and an idea-in-practice) was a site for reconfiguring antecedents and negotiating fragmentation. Drawing on indigenous sources, this study shows how caste, class, ethnicity, region and community were refracted to conceptualise wider unities. The mapping of cultural continuities through change facilitates a more nuanced investigation of the ontology of nationhood, seeing it as related to, but more than political nationalism. It outlines a fresh paradigm for recalibrating postcolonial identities, offering interpretive strategies to mediate fragmentation.

Notions of Nationhood in Bengal

Author : Swarupa Gupta
Publisher : BRILL
Page : 425 pages
File Size : 23,65 MB
Release : 2009
Category : Philosophy
ISBN : 9004176144

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This book reopens the debate on colonial nationalisms, going beyond derivative , borrowed , political and modernist paradigms. It introduces the conceptual category of samaj to demonstrate how indigenous socio-cultural origins in Bengal interacted with late-colonial discourses to produce the notion of a nation. Samaj (a historical society and an idea-in-practice) was a site for reconfiguring antecedents and negotiating fragmentation. Drawing on indigenous sources, this study shows how caste, class, ethnicity, region and community were refracted to conceptualise wider unities. The mapping of cultural continuities through change facilitates a more nuanced investigation of the ontology of nationhood, seeing it as related to, but more than political nationalism. It outlines a fresh paradigm for recalibrating postcolonial identities, offering interpretive strategies to mediate fragmentation.

Performing Nationhood

Author : Mimasha Pandit
Publisher : Oxford University Press
Page : 212 pages
File Size : 21,21 MB
Release : 2019-06-18
Category : History
ISBN : 0199099758

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This book serves as the corridor to one’s ‘self’. It began as a humble attempt to interrogate the performance history of Swadeshi Bengal. The burgeoning public space and audibility of voices hitherto unheard presented a two-way problem, for the colonisers, as well as for the colonised. The thinking mind that hid behind a facade of obedience suddenly appeared before all. The transparent veil separating the hidden from the manifest was torn apart. In the context of swadeshi and boycott agitation, performative spaces like theatre, jatra, and songs did not just serve as a forum for disseminating the notions of nationhood put forward by the intellectuals. The ideas gained a life of their own once they were placed in the performative space. Encompassing both the performer and the audience/recipient of the ideas, the notion underwent a change at various planes of consciousness. The notion of nation, as disseminated by the performances, acquired a different meaning at the level of enactment, and attained an entirely new substance when received by the audience. None of these exchanges occurred in complete passivity of any one party present in the performative space. Consequently, the emergent emotion of nationhood developed as a nuanced image of ‘self’. This book has tried to locate the beginning of that emotion of national ‘self’.

Performing Nationhood

Author : Mimasha Pandit
Publisher :
Page : pages
File Size : 35,65 MB
Release : 2019
Category : Bengal (India)
ISBN : 9780199099764

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This volume serves as the corridor to one's 'self'. It began as a humble attempt to interrogate the performance history of Swadeshi Bengal. The burgeoning public space and audibility of voices hitherto unheard presented a 2-way problem, for the colonisers, as well as for the colonised.

Cultural Constellations, Place-Making and Ethnicity in Eastern India, c. 1850-1927

Author : Swarupa Gupta
Publisher : BRILL
Page : 422 pages
File Size : 10,40 MB
Release : 2017-11-01
Category : Social Science
ISBN : 9004349766

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In Cultural Constellations, Place-Making and Ethnicity in Eastern India, c. 1850-1927, Swarupa Gupta outlines a fresh paradigm moving beyond stereotypical representations of eastern India as a site of ethnic fragmentation. The book traces unities by exploring intersections between (1) cultural constellations; (2) place-making and (3) ethnicity. Centralising place-making, it tells the story of how people made places, mediating caste / religious / linguistic contestations. It offers new meanings of ‘region’ in Eastern Indian and global contexts by showing how an interregional arena comprising Bengal, Assam and Orissa was forged. Using historical tracts, novels, poetry and travelogues, the book argues that commonalities in Eastern India were linked to imaginings of Indian nationhood. The analysis contains interpretive strategies for mediating federalist separatisms and fragmentation in contemporary India.

Science and Nationalism in Bengal,1876-1947

Author : Chittabrata Palit
Publisher :
Page : 224 pages
File Size : 20,91 MB
Release : 2004
Category : India
ISBN :

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Articles with reference to Bengal, India, and erstwhile East Bengal (Pakistan), now Bangladesh.

Different Nationalisms

Author : Semantī Ghosha
Publisher :
Page : 0 pages
File Size : 23,68 MB
Release : 2016
Category : Bangladesh
ISBN : 9780199087389

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This work claims that there were many different nationalisms in colonial Bengal. It shows that Bengali Muslims were not opposed to Hindu-Muslim unity, but keen to work on this unity on a regional level. It also shows that Bengali Hindu nationalism was also not a homogeneous body of thought.

Nationalism and the Problem of Difference

Author : Semanti Ghosh
Publisher :
Page : pages
File Size : 21,67 MB
Release : 1999
Category : Bengal (India)
ISBN :

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One of the principal claims of the nationalist ideology in colonial India was to unite various groups and interests into a singular political and ideological system in order to create a common national platform against the British. However, the nationalist agenda faced a grave dilemma on this count, because the real or perceived elements of 'difference' within the society constantly challenged the ideas of a singular nation-hood. Nationalist discourse and politics, therefore, suffered from the tension between the indivisibility of the national interest on the one hand, and the disparateness of various community, class or caste interests on the other. Focusing mainly on religious differences, my thesis explores this dilemma in the context of Bengali nationalism between the Swadeshi movement (1905) and the Independence and Partition (1947). Through a study of the ideological formulations and political experimentations of the Bengali Muslims and Bengali Hindus, I show that the nationalist predicament is to be understood in terms of the controversies around the questions of national sovereignty and the principles of representation for a national-democratic society. As a consequence of the contesting ideas on these key issues, there emerged multiple visions of the nation, which continued to negotiate throughout this era. The nation envisaged by C.R. Das, Fazlul Huq, Abul Hashim and many other Bengali political and intellectual leaders was different from the Congress notion of a centralized nation-state of India. The Pakistan movement in Bengal was primarily based on such alternative ideas of the post-colonial state, with a demand for greater decentralization and fair representation of different communities and groups at all levels of the state and society. Central to these alternative nationalisms was a strong sense of regional patriotism, which actually opened up negotiating grounds for resolving the riddles of representation and sovereignty in Bengal in the first half of the twentieth century.