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Resistance as Negotiation

Resistance as Negotiation

Making States and Tribes in the Margins of Modern India

 

“Tribes” appear worldwide today as vestiges of a pre-modern past at odds with the workings of modern states. Acts of resistance and rebellion by groups designated as “tribal” have fascinated as well as perplexed administrators and scholars in South Asia and beyond. Tribal resistance and rebellion are held to be tragic yet heroic political acts by “subaltern” groups confronting omnipotent states. By contrast, this book draws on fifteen years of archival and ethnographic research to argue that statemaking is intertwined inextricably with the politics of tribal resistance in the margins of modern India.

Uday Chandra demonstrates how the modern Indian state and its tribal or adivasi subjects have made and remade each other throughout the colonial and postcolonial eras, historical processes of modern statemaking shaping and being shaped by myriad forms of resistance by tribal subjects. Accordingly, tribal resistance, whether peaceful or violent, is better understood vis-à-vis negotiations with the modern state, rather than its negation, over the past two centuries.

This book asks for a rethinking and rewriting of the political history of modern India from its “tribal” margins.

  • Author

    Uday Chandra is Assistant Professor of Government at Georgetown University, Qatar.

  • Details

    • Details

      Paperback

      340 pages

      For sale in South Asia only

      In the Hedgehog and Fox series, copublished with Ashoka University

      You can buy this book from our distributors Orient Blackswan or from good bookstores, or from online portals.

₹795.00Price
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