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Claiming the city : protest, crime, and scandals in colonial Calcutta, c. 1860-1920 / Anindita Ghosh.

LIBRA DS486.C2 G42 2016
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Ghosh, Anindita, 1967- author.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Social conditions.
Kolkata (India)--History--19th century.
Kolkata (India).
Kolkata (India)--History--20th century.
India--Social conditions--19th century.
India.
India--20th century.
India--Kolkata.
Kolkata (India)--Social conditions.
Kolkata (India)--Politics and government.
Politics and government.
Genre:
History.
Physical Description:
x, 328 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm
Edition:
First edition.
Place of Publication:
New Delhi, India : Oxford University Press, 2016.
Summary:
Departing from approaches that see the city as the unproblematic product of British initiative and disciplining, 'Claiming the city' presents the urban processes shaping Calcutta as contested and partially indigenous. In a crucial intervention the work studies how the colonial urban was not just born out of the ordered institutional spaces inscribed by public parks and squares, sewers and water supplies, roads and tramways, but also the more plebeian imprint of their circumvention by the city's inhabitants - through their use of this civic infrastructure, violence, protest and street demonstrations. In the process the book also traces the ways in which the once proverbial City of Palaces turned by the early twentieth century into a city of endemic unrest and political strife. Ghosh breaks new ground by exploring the history of colonial urbanization from below through a wide range of sources, from street songs and photographs to local histories and memoirs, in addition to the more well-known official archives. In bringing together for the first time both known and unknown histories of the city in imaginative ways, the book weaves a vibrant narrative of everyday life in colonial Calcutta. Scandal, rumour, murder and music help locate energetic lower layers of public sphere in the city that were deeply invested in the urban. By highlighting the tensions of living in a rapidly changing world of technological innovations, social and moral dilemmas, municipal strictures and grinding poverty, the book establishes Calcuttas residents not as passive consumers but rightful claimants to the city.
Contents:
Introduction
Urban space, technology, and community
Songs, the city, and the everyday
Sexuality, scandals, and the urban order
Battle for the streets: contesting municipal regimes
Criminality, class, and moral anxieties
Collective protest and riots
Conclusion.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references (pages 299-318) and index.
ISBN:
9780199464791
0199464790
OCLC:
939993742

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