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Partition's legacies / Joya Chatterji ; introduction by David Washbrook.
- Format:
- Book
- Author/Creator:
- Chatterji, Joya, author.
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- Muslims--India--Bengal--History.
- Muslims.
- Bengal (India)--History--Partition, 1947.
- Bengal (India).
- India--History--Partition, 1947.
- India.
- Physical Description:
- 1 online resource (570 pages)
- Place of Publication:
- Albany, New York : State University of New York Press, [2021]
- Summary:
- Essays on modern Indian history and the legacy of Partition.Partition's Legacies offers a selection of Joya Chatterji's finest and most influential essays. "Partition, nation-making, frontiers, refugees, minority formation, and categories of citizenship have been my preoccupations," she writes in the preface, and these are also the major themes of this book.Chatterji's first book, Bengal Divided, shifted the focus from Muslim fanaticism as the driving force of Partition towards "secular" nationalism and Hindu aggression. Her Spoils of Partition rejected the idea of Partition as a breaking apart, showing it to be a process in the remaking of society and state. Her third book, Bengal Diaspora, cowritten with Claire Alexander and Annu Jalais, challenged the idea of migration and resettlement as exceptional situations. Partition's Legacies can be seen as continuous with Chatterji's earlier work as well as a distillation and expansion of it.Chatterji is known for the elegance of her prose as much as for the sharpness of her insights into Indian history, and Partition's Legacies will enthrall everyone interested in modern India's apocalyptic past. "What emerges from the essays," David Washbrook writes in the introduction, "is often quite startling. The demarcation of Partition followed no master plan or even coherent strategy but was made up of myriad ad hoc decisions taken on the ground, often by obscure actors. Refugee policy, immigrant rights, and even definitions of national citizenship ... were produced by no deus ex machina but out of day-to-day struggles on the streets and in the courts."Joya Chatterji is Professor of South Asian History at the University of Cambridge and Fellow of Trinity College. A former director of the Centre of South Asian Studies at Cambridge, she is Editor-in-Chief of the journal Modern Asian Studies and Fellow of the British Academy.
- Contents:
- Front Matter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Decolonisation in South Asia
- The Fashioning of a Frontier
- The Bengali Muslim
- Secularisation and Constitutive Moments
- Rights or Charity? The Debate over Relief and Rehabilitation in West Bengal 1947–1950
- Migration Myths and the Mechanics of Assimilation
- Dispositions and Destinations
- Dispersal and the Failure of Rehabilitation
- Of Graveyards and Ghettos
- On Being Stuck in the Bengal Delta
- From Subjecthood to Citizenship
- Princes, Subjects, and Gandhi
- South Asian Histories of Citizenship 1946–1970
- Index
- Notes:
- Description based on print version record.
- ISBN:
- 9781438483351
- 143848335X
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