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Full Description
This volume examines the phenomenon of contemporary Hindu nationalism or 'new Hindutva' that is presently the dominant ideological and political-electoral formation in India. There is a rich body of work on Hindu nationalism, but its main focus is on an earlier moment of insurgent movement politics in the 1980s and 1990s. In contrast, new Hindutva is a governmental formation that converges with wider global currents and enjoys mainstream acceptance. To understand these new political forms and their implications for democratic futures, a fresh set of reflections is in order. This book approaches contemporary Hindutva as an example of a democratic authoritarianism or an authoritarian populism, a politics that simultaneously advances and violates ideas and practices of popular and constitutional democracy.
Contents
List of abbreviations; Acknowledgements; List of tables and images; 1. What is New about New Hindutva? Thomas Blom Hansen and Srirupa Roy; Part I. Rule: 2. New Hindutva Timeline: September 2013-October 2020 Ashwin Subramanian; 3. Normalizing Violence: Lessons from Hindu Nationalist India Amrita Basu; 4. Hindutva Establishments: Right-wing Think Tanks and the Mainstreaming of Governmental Hindutva Srirupa Roy; 5. New Hindutva and the UP Model: An Interview with Neha Dixit and Nakul Sawhney Srirupa Roy and Thomas Blom Hansen; Part II. Articulation: 6. The Making of a Majoritarian Metropolis: Crowd Action, Public Order, and Communal Zoning in Calcutta Ritajyoti Bandyopadhyay; 7. Social Segregation and Everyday Hindutva in Middle India Thomas Blom Hansen; Part III. Inclusion: 8. 'Mitakuye Oyasin - We Are All Related:' Hindutva and Indigeneity in Northeast India Arkotong Longkumer; 9. From Castes to Nationalist Hindus: The Making of Hinduism as a Civil Religion Suryakant Waghmore; 10. When Hindutva Performs Muslimness: Encounters with the Muslim Rashtriya Manch Lalit Vachani; Part IV. Violence: 11. Violence after Violence: The Politics of Narrative over the Delhi Pogrom Irfan Ahmad; 12. Development: India's Foundational Myth Mona Bhan; 13. Pratikriya, Guilt, and Reactionary Violence Parvis Ghassem-Fachandi; About the contributors; Index.