Spaces of anticolonialism : Delhi's urban governmentalities / Stephen Legg.
Series: Geographies of justice and social transformation ; 65Publication details: Athens: The University of Georgia Press, 2025.Description: x, 301pISBN:- 9780820367859
- Indian National Congress
- Anti-imperialist movements -- India -- Delhi -- History
- Civil disobedience -- India -- Delhi -- History
- City and town life -- India -- Delhi -- History
- Delhi (India) -- Politics and government
- Delhi (India) -- Historical geography
- New Delhi (India) -- Politics and government
- New Delhi (India) -- Historical geography
- India -- Politics and government -- 1919-1947
- India -- History -- Quit India movement, 1942
- 954.56 L524S 23/eng/20241126
- DS485.D3 L44 20
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Notes | Date due | Barcode | |
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Central Library, IISER Bhopal On Display | Reference | 954.56 L524S (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Not For Loan | Title recommended by Dr A. K. Pankaj | 12402 |
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660.6509 R67S Synthetic : | 808.0663058 El58N Naked fieldnotes : | 813.54 G11S Sophie's world / | 954.56 L524S Spaces of anticolonialism : Delhi's urban governmentalities / |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Anti-imperial Delhi -- Delhi's anticolonial archive -- A disobedient city -- The Gurdwara Sisganj : problematizing nonviolence -- Urban conflict and collaboration -- Quit Delhi : the overground -- The Underground : problematizing nonviolence -- Victory?
"Spaces of Anticolonialism: Delhi's Urban Governmentalities provides a spatial analysis of the anticolonial governmentalities that emerged in the colonial capital of British India. Reading across imperial and nationalist archives, newspapers, memoirs, oral histories, and interviews it exposes the subaltern geographies and struggles which have traditionally been overshadowed by the presence of national leaders in Delhi. It reads the new capital and the old city as one interconnected political landscape and tracks the efforts of the Indian National Congress to mobilize and marshal support for the mass movements of Civil Disobedience (1930-34), Quit India (1942-43), and beyond. This bottom-up analysis, focused on the streets, bazaars, neighborhoods, homes, and undergrounds of the two cities, emphasizes the significance of the articulation of physical and political space; it highlights the pioneering role of women in crafting these spaces; and it exposes the micro-techniques that Congress used to encourage Gandhi's nonviolence. Michel Foucault's final lectures on parrhesia (courageous speech and actions) are used to analyze these spaces of anticolonialism as coherent governmentalities which were themselves rejected by those who turned to violence in the years before independence in 1947. This volume provides an innovative study of anticolonial geography and a restive history of the capital of contemporary India's 1.4 billion people"--
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