Heterogeneities: Identity Formations in Modern India
English


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About The Book

Taking the instability of all identities as its point of departure this collection of essays probes the enigmas of identity politics. How does identitarian politics trying to homogenize identities around some cultural or ethnic name deal with unstable and diverse identities? And what are the kinds of identity formations that resist identity-based projects? Drawing from theoretical perspectives on communal polarization and its relation to early nationalism the author examines a range of seemingly dissimilar subjects such as the teaching of Keats in a Delhi college the Indian novel in the English language nineteenth-century Banglasahitya inter-community love communalism Tagore and globalization and inter-disciplinarity. Some of the essays in this book are especially concerned with the recent decades that have witnessed the rise of Hindutva and which have also marked the authors own growth from a student of English Literature at Delhi University to his later interest and scholarship in history and politics. Pradip Datta begins with his reading of Keats the quintessential Romantic poet under the tutelage of a teacher of English with a vernacular background at a time that witnessed the capitalist expansion of the middle class as well as the spread of the Ram Janmabhoomi movement across the cities and towns of India. His interest in plotting the coordinates of heterogeneity and interrogating identity formations led him to travel to Ayodhya in the early 1990s and interact with kar sevaks there.This book is therefore a part of the authors ongoing attempt at examining how literary and politico-cultural representations of identities can reinforce rigid boundaries. Juxtaposing these with knowledge systems and their respective methods Pradip Datta argues in favor of practices and spaces that facilitate exchange and reciprocity among a range of disciplines. By proposing the idea of a disciplinary commons he offers the pedagogic as a model for recognizing and validating the heterogeneous elements in the formation of our identities.
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