Savarkar and the making of Hindutva / Janaki Bakhle.
Material type: TextLanguage: English Publication details: Oxford : Princeton University Press, 2024ISBN:- 9780691262444
Item type | Home library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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OPJGU Sonepat- Campus Main Library | General Books | 320.540954092 BA-S (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 152620 |
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320.540954 NU-C Clash within democracy, religious violence, and India's future | 320.540954 SU- Subnational movements in South Asia | 320.540954 SU-H Holy science the biopolitics of Hindu nationalism | 320.540954092 BA-S Savarkar and the making of Hindutva / | 320.5409540922 CH-P Politics, ideology and nationalism Jinnah, Savarkar & Ambedkar versus Gandhi | 320.54095493 DE-S Sinhalese Buddhist nationalist ideology implications for politics and conflict resolution in Sri Lanka | 320.54095493 WI-S Sri Lankan Tamil nationalism its origins and development in the Nineteenth and Twentieth centuries |
"A monumental intellectual history of the pivotal figure of Hindu nationalism. Vinayak Damodar Savarkar (1883–1966) was an intellectual, ideologue, and anticolonial nationalist leader in India’s struggle for independence from British colonial rule, one whose anti-Muslim writings exploited India’s tensions in pursuit of Hindu majority rule. Savarkar and the Making of Hindutva is the first comprehensive intellectual history of one of the most contentious political thinkers of the twentieth century. Janaki Bakhle examines the full range of Savarkar’s voluminous writings in his native language of Marathi, from political and historical works to poetry, essays, and speeches. She reveals the complexities in the various positions he took as a champion of the beleaguered Hindu community, an anticaste progressive, an erudite if polemical historian, a pioneering advocate for women’s dignity, and a patriotic poet. This critical examination of Savarkar’s thought shows that Hindutva is as much about the aesthetic experiences that have been attached to the idea of India itself as it is a militant political program that has targeted the Muslim community in pursuit of power in postcolonial India. By bringing to light the many legends surrounding Savarkar, Bakhle shows how this figure from a provincial locality in colonial India rose to world-historical importance. Savarkar and the Making of Hindutva also uncovers the vast hagiographic literature that has kept alive the myth of Savarkar as a uniquely brave, brilliant, and learned revolutionary leader of the Hindu nation."--
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