/


India's Revolutionary Inheritance
by Chris Moffat (Author)★★★★★
★★★★★
4.8|6 ratings
Save 39%27.58$45.00
Prime
In Stock
FREE delivery Sunday, June 22 on orders shipped by Amazon over $35 Or Prime members get FREE delivery Thursday, June 19. Order within 16 hrs 41 mins. Join Prime
Free delivery with Prime
27.58 USwith Prime
FREE delivery Sunday, June 22 on orders shipped by Amazon over $35 Or Prime members get FREE delivery Thursday, June 19. Order within 16 hrs 41 mins. Join Prime
In Stock
Secure transaction
Ships from and sold by Amazon.US
Return policy: Eligible for Return, Refund or Replacement
What do anti-colonial histories mean for politics in contemporary India? How can we understand a political terrain that appears crowded with the dead, heroic figures from past struggles who call the living to account and demand action? What role do these 'afterlives' play in the inauguration of new politics and the fashioning of possible futures? In this engaging and innovative analysis of anti-colonial afterlives in modern South Asia, Chris Moffat crafts a framework that takes the dead seriously - not as passive entities, ceremonially invoked, but as active interlocutors and instigators in the present. Focusing on the iconic revolutionary martyr Bhagat Singh (1907–1931), Moffat establishes the problem of inheritance as central to the forms and futures of democracy in this postcolonial polity. Tracing Bhagat Singh's revenant presence in India today, he demonstrates how living communities are animated by a sense of obligation, duty or debt to the dead. Read more
Product Information
Publisher | Cambridge University Press |
Publication date | July 9, 2020 |
Language | English |
Print length | 296 pages |
ISBN-10 | 1108739016 |
ISBN-13 | 978-1108739016 |
Item Weight | 15.9 ounces |
Dimensions | 6 x 0.67 x 9 inches |
Best Sellers Rank | #5,549,934 in Books (See Top 100 in Books) #747 in Historical India & South Asia Biographies #2,407 in Asian History (Books) #4,601 in India History |
Customer Reviews | 4.8 4.8 out of 5 stars 6 ratings |