The Construction of Communalism in Colonial North IndiaOxford University Press, 2006 - 320 pages "This book charts the history of the term communalism and the politics and attitudes it seeks to encapsulate. While attending closely to the social, economic and political issues underlying Hindu and Muslim struggles, the author investigates the meanings different participants in the sectarian politics of the period attached to these politics. The second edition reopens many of the questions signalled in the first edition, carries the discussion forward through an analysis of the uses of the term communalism in a postcolonial world, and seeks to historicize the debate on political violence and the targeting of the minorities in recent times."--pub. desc. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 36
Page 41
... seen evolving even in some of the earliest reactions to the events of 1809-11 . Consider the contemporary officials ' reports on the great anti - house tax hartal of December 1810 - January 1811. This extraordinary act of protest was ...
... seen evolving even in some of the earliest reactions to the events of 1809-11 . Consider the contemporary officials ' reports on the great anti - house tax hartal of December 1810 - January 1811. This extraordinary act of protest was ...
Page 80
... seen as another instance of the assertion of their money power by moneylenders and other rich Hindus and hotly contested by the weavers and other local Muslims as having no customary sanction . 34 In Bareilly the major incident of the ...
... seen as another instance of the assertion of their money power by moneylenders and other rich Hindus and hotly contested by the weavers and other local Muslims as having no customary sanction . 34 In Bareilly the major incident of the ...
Page 116
... seen from the indigenous community's point of view as against the ruling bureaucracy's . Since , in the colonial regime's perception , there is no political life other than the life of the state , a disruption of order within a local ...
... seen from the indigenous community's point of view as against the ruling bureaucracy's . Since , in the colonial regime's perception , there is no political life other than the life of the state , a disruption of order within a local ...
Contents
The Colonial Construction of the Indian Past | 23 |
The Bigoted Julaha | 66 |
Community as History | 109 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
agitation Ahirs Allahabad appears attack Azamgarh district Ballia Banaras Baqr-Id Benares Bengal Bharatendu Bhojpuri Bhojpuri region Bhumihars Bihar Bombay Brahmans British rule Calcutta caste chpt classes colonial colonialist communalist conflict Congress Cow-Protection crowd Delhi discourse Dumraon early eastern U.P. economic evidence Ganesh Shankar Vidyarthi Gazetteer Ghazipur Gorakhpur Government Hasan Hindu community Hindu-Muslim Hindus and Muslims Hindustan Ibid Ibrahimpur Indian nationalism Islam Julahas Kanpur killed Koeris large numbers London Lucknow Magistrate Mauna modern mosque movement Mubarakpur Muharram Musalmans Muslim Muslim weavers nationalist Nehru nineteenth century North-Western Provinces northern India noted officials Oudh outbreak patia police qasba question qurbani Rajputs religion religious communities Report Sabha sectarian Shahabad Shahi Singh social strife temple unity village violence Waqeat weaving writings zamindars अपने इस एक और का कि की के को जो तो देश धर्म नहीं ने पर भी मुसलमान में यह लोग वह सब से हम ही है हो