Waiting for the People: The Idea of Democracy in Indian Anticolonial Thought – Ebook Instant Download/Delivery ISBN(s): 9780674290372,0674290372
Product detail:
- ISBN 10: 0674295072
- ISBN 13: 9780674295070
- Author: Nazmul Sultan
An original reconstruction of how the debates over peoplehood defined Indian anticolonial thought, and a bold new framework for theorizing the global career of democracy. Indians, their former British rulers asserted, were unfit to rule themselves. Behind this assertion lay a foundational claim about the absence of peoplehood in India. The purported “backwardness” of Indians as a people led to a democratic legitimation of empire, justifying self-government at home and imperial rule in the colonies. In response, Indian anticolonial thinkers launched a searching critique of the modern ideal of peoplehood. Waiting for the People is the first account of Indian answers to the question of peoplehood in political theory. From Surendranath Banerjea and Radhakamal Mukerjee to Mohandas Gandhi and Jawaharlal Nehru, Indian political thinkers passionately explored the fraught theoretical space between sovereignty and government. In different ways, Indian anticolonial thinkers worked to address the developmental assumptions built into the modern problem of peoplehood, scrutinizing contemporary European definitions of “the people” and the assumption that a unified peoplehood was a prerequisite for self-government. Nazmul Sultan demonstrates how the anticolonial reckoning with the ideal of popular sovereignty fostered novel insights into the globalization of democracy and ultimately drove India’s twentieth-century political transformation. Waiting for the People excavates, at once, the alternative forms and trajectories proposed for India’s path to popular sovereignty and the intellectual choices that laid the foundation for postcolonial democracy. In so doing, it uncovers largely unheralded Indian contributions to democratic theory at large. India’s effort to reconfigure the relationship between popular sovereignty and self-government proves a key event in the global history of political thought, one from which a great deal remains to be learned.
Table of contents:
- Chapter One: A Global Hierarchy of Peoples: The Rise of Developmentalism in the Nineteenth Century
- Chapter Two: The Birth of the People: Liberalism and the Origins of the Anticolonial Democratic Proj
- Chapter Three: The Colonial Paradox of Peoplehood: Swaraj and the Gandhian Moment
- Chapter Four: Between the Many and the One: The Anticolonial Federalist Challenge
- Chapter Five: To “Carry” the People through History: Postcolonial Founding and the Idea of Indep
- Chapter Six: The Two Times of the People: The Boundary Problem, or the Burden of Unity
- Conclusion: The Futures of Anticolonial Political Thought