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Full Description
The Routledge Handbook of State, Nation and Nationalism in South Asia analyses the nature of postcolonial South Asian states, examines enduring debates on nation and nationalism, and investigates the role of interconnected structure and agency in constructing an idea of nation and nationalism in respective South Asian countries.
Following an introduction by the editor, this book is structured in three sections: 1. Nature of State 2. Imagining a Nation and Nation-Making 3. Contesting Nationalism. Written by a mix of established and young scholars on South Asian politics and related disciplines, this handbook explores the following pertinent questions about the region: What is the nature of the State? Who identifies which identity groups are part of the nation and who are the "others"? What is the "dominant" form of nationalism? Why do identity-based differences and conflict exist?
A useful guide and reference work, this handbook will be of interest to students, academics, and researchers of South Asian Studies and related disciplines.
Contents
Introduction, Part One: Nature of State, One: Changing Nature of the Indian State, Two: Colonial and Postcolonial Anthropology Among the Nagas: Shaping the Modern Nation-State in India's Borderlands, Three: The Demand for Pakistan: Multiple Imaginations Amidst Constitutional Debates, Four: Unmanning the Indian Action Hero in Pakistani Women's Cinema (1980s): Community, State, and Gendered Dissidence , Five: The Nature of the Nepali State (1768-2025): A Regime Type Perspective, Six: A troubled past, a troubled present: A troubled future?, Seven: Things Fall Apart: Assessing US-led State-building Efforts in Afghanistan (2001- 2021), Eight: Maldives, Small State Identities and Agential Power: A Framework for Analysing the Prominence of South Asia's Smaller States, Part Two: Imagining a Nation and Nation-Making, Nine: Contested Citizenships: Overseas Indians and the Pursuit for 'Dual Nationality' after 1947, Ten: Of Nations, Moments, and Nationalism: The Bangladesh Case, Eleven: Subversive Others, Liminal Subjects: Minorities and the Making of a Nation in Pakistan, Twelve: Hindu community in Bangladesh: Between identity and marginality., Thirteen: Identity Politics in Jammu and Kashmir: Fragmentation and Contestation , Fourteen: Recognition or Reconfiguration: The Politics of Gender and Nation Building in India , Fifteen : Changing Idea of the Nation in Bhutan due to Mass Outmigration, Sixteen: Bhutanese National Identity: A Changing Narrative from Monarchy to Democracy, Part Three: Contesting Nationalism, Seventeen: Linguistic Nationalism in South Asia: Conceptual and Historical Understanding , Eighteen: Bengali and Bangladeshi Nationalism, Nineteen: Internal Colonial Nationalism and Indigenous Resistance: The Chittagong Hill Tracts of Bangladesh, Twenty: Ethnic Nationalism as Resistance: Sindhi and Siraiki Movements in Pakistan, Twenty One: Tamil Nationalism in Sri Lanka: Historical Foundations, Political Dynamics, and Post-War Challenges, Twenty-Two: The Consolidation of Hindu Nationalism in India, Twenty-Three: "Nationalism of Small Peoples" : Sikh Nationalism, Twenty-Four: Caste and Nationalism in India, Twenty Five: Muslim Citizens' Engagement With Hindutva Nationalism, Twenty Six: Crown, Faith, and Tongue: The Evolution of Nepali Nationalism since Unification, Twenty-Seven: Balochistan as Achilles heel of Pakistani Nationalism, Twenty-Eight: 'Baiya-Toiya' and the Aspirational Middle-Class Nationalist Imaginary: Shifting Axes of Political Polarization in Sri Lanka, Twenty Nine: Scripted Divisions: Colonial Epistemologies and the Invention of Linguistic Nationalism in Sri Lanka



