Emergency Chronicles: Indira Gandhi
English


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About The Book

As the world once again confronts an eruption of authoritarianism Gyan Prakash's Emergency Chronicles takes us back to the moment of India's independence to offer a comprehensive historical account of Indira Gandhi's Emergency of 1975-77. Stripping away the myth that this was a sudden event brought on solely by the Prime Minister's desire to cling to power it argues that the Emergency was as much Indira's doing as it was the product of Indian democracy's troubled relationship with popular politics and a turning point in its history.Prakash delves into the chronicles of the preceding years to reveal how the fine balance between state power and civil rights was upset by the unfulfilled promise of democratic transformation. He explains how growing popular unrest disturbed Indira's regime prompting her to take recourse to the law to suspend lawful rights wounding the political system further and opening the door for caste politics and Hindu nationalism. About the Author Gyan Prakash is the Dayton-Stockton professor of history at Princeton University. He was a member of the influential Subaltern Studies Collective until its dissolution in 2006 and has been a recipient of the Guggenheim and the National Endowment of Humanities fellowships. He is the author of several books includingAnother Reason (1999) and the widely acclaimedMumbai Fables (2010) which was adapted for the filmBombay Velvet (2015) and for which he wrote the story and co-wrote the screenplay. He lives in Princeton New Jersey.
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