Modernity and Changing Social Fabric of Punjab and Haryana

EDITOR- Yogesh Snehi and Lallan S. Baghel

HB
₹1295 . $64.95 . ₤52.95
PB
₹  . $  . ₤
POD
₹  . $  . ₤
e-Book
₹  . $ . ₤

 

   

INFORMATION

  • EDITOR : Yogesh Snehi and Lallan S. Baghel
  • HB ISBN : 978-93-86552-98-3
  • Year : 2018
  • Extent : 454 pp.
  • Discount available on checkout
  • Usually dispatched within 3 to 5 working days.

Tagore

HB
₹ 995 . $  . ₤
PB
₹  . $  . ₤
POD
₹  . $ . ₤
e-Book
₹  . $  . ₤

 

   

INFORMATION

  • AUTHOR –
  • ISBN – 978-93-84082-78-9
  • Year – 2016
  • Extent: 400 + 40 coloured illustrations
  • 10% discount + free shipping
  • Usually dispatched within 3 to 5 working days.

This eclectic collection of essays is embedded in both the past and present of the region’s complex interface with modernity. It is pertinent to note that despite the postmodernist critiques of the abstract notion of the term modern, modernity continues to be relevant for an understanding of contemporary social processes. Apart from theoretical debates, ‘modernity’ as a process and value system as well as a contrast to ‘tradition’ offers multiple interpretative possibilities which are deeply manifested in the everyday experience of the self and community. While acknowledging both enchantment and disenchantment with modernity, this volume explores the opportunities, contingencies and contestations of the process. Spatializing modernity, therefore, takes the concept to the arena of experience and practice, thereby bringing it closer to the script of the everyday: the contradictory and at times polemical positioning of access and denial, institutional and individual, urban and rural, trader/moneylender and peasant/zamindar, Jat and Dalit (in context of landownership and access to wealth), and erotic/gender (urban) and ideal (rural). These and other similar themes involve self-positioning and Othering. Modern, modernity and modernization are, therefore, competing, contradictory and overlapping concepts that get situated around the narratives of power, prestige, entitlement and access.

The Editor
Yogesh Snehi teaches history at the School of Liberal Studies, Ambedkar University Delhi (AUD) and has been a fellow at the Indian Institute of Advanced Study, Shimla (2013-15). Through a Tasveer Ghar fellowship, he has created a digital repository of images that are in circulation at popular Sufi shrines in Punjab. His major teaching and research interests focus on regions and in situating popular veneration. Snehi’s monograph ‘Spatializing Popular Sufi Shrines in Punjab: Dreams, Memories, Territoriality’ is forthcoming from Routledge.
Lallan S. Baghel teaches philosophy at the Department of Philosophy, Panjab University, Chandigarh. His teaching and research focus on aspects of social and political philosophy; philosophy of human rights, philosophical foundations of feminist discourses, environmental philosophy, critical theory and applied ethics. Baghel has contributed numerous papers to various national and international publications.

As a global figure, Tagore transcends the boundaries of language and reaches out to people distant both in time and space. His art took inspiration from contemporary Western trends and became a powerful means to connect with people beyond Bengal. Word, image, song, and text were his tools of communication, as also his extraordinary presence in a sartorial garb of his own design. A littérateur in many genres, the impact of his work was determined both by the material he presented, and by its simultaneously local and global contexts. Now, when his international reputation has spanned over more than a hundred years, it is important to revisit the sites of Tagore’s eminence, and ask to what extent he was a ‘living text’ in the century that witnessed him as a global intellectual.
Accordingly, this volume investigates how Tagore’s writings and art are linked to the metalinguistic domains of the psychological, medical and mythical; how he was received in various cultures outside India; how his art was determined by individual circumstances and global aspirations; and how he acted as an inspiration to his contemporaries and subsequent generations including modern Indian writers and artists.

The Editor
Imre Bangha studied in Budapest and Santiniketan and at present is Associate Professor of Hindi at the University of Oxford. He has published books and essays in English, Hindi, and Hungarian on literature in Brajbhasha and other forms of old Hindi and has also prepared Hungarian translations from various South Asian languages. His work on the international reception of Bengali culture includes Rabindranath Tagore: Hundred Years of Global Reception (2014, co-edited with M. Kämpchen) and Hungry Tiger: Encounter between India and Central Europe (2007).

Table of Contents

Table of Contents

List Of Tables Ix-X
Acknowledgements Xi-Xii
Introduction: Many Moments Of Modernity Yogesh Snehi And Lallan S. Baghel 1-25
Part I Landscapes Of Modernity
Spatial Variegations: Modernism And Encounters Of Regions And Nation-State In India Kumar Sanjay Singh 29-46
Myth, Idea, And Reality: Unveiling The ‘Modern’ City Navprit Kaur 47-62
Creating Ideal Sikh Girls: The Sikh Kanya Mahavidyalaya, Ferozepur Mahima Manchanda 63-96
Part II Caste Hegemony And The Question Of Self
Khap Panchayats: A Socio-Historical Overview Ajay Kumar 99-131
‘Doing Good, Not Feeling Good’: The ‘Honourable’ Jats Of Haryana Bhupendra Yadav 133-157
Part III Land, Labour And Agrarian Crisis
Bonded Labour In Capitalist Agrarian Economy Of Punjab Manjit Singh And Steve Taylor 161-193
Agrarian Crisis In Punjab: Nature And Dimensions Sukhpal Singh, H.S. Kingra And Sangeet 195-210
Indebtedness And Suicides: Field Notes On Agricultural Labourers Of Punjab Vishav Bharti 211-227
Part Iv State, Institutions And Inheritance
Modernity, State, And Institutionalization Of Dissent: A Critical Analysis Of The Punjab State Commission For Scheduled Castes
Jatinder Singh
231-243
Land Rights, Housing Rights, And Land Acquisition In Haryana And Punjab K. Gopal Iyer 245-280
On Claiming Inheritance: Emerging Patterns Among The Women Of Haryana Prem Chowdhry 281-296
Part V Migration, Diaspora And Identities
Apana-Paraya: The Making Of A Migrant Neighbourhood Radhika Chopra 299-323
Who Speaks For Punjab? Jat Stars Anjali Gera Roy 325-345
Murder Of A Saint And Dalit Protest: Politics Of Construction Of Exclusive Identities Paramjit S. Judge 347-369
Coming Out And Coming Of Age In Rural Punjab: An Ethnography Of Adolescent Same-Sex Sexuality Diepiriye Kuku-Siemons 371-407
Bibliography 409-434
Notes On Editors And Contributors 435-436
Index 437-453