Fr. 126.00

From Subjects to Citizens - Society and the Everyday State in India and Pakistan, 1947-1970

English · Hardback

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"Offers a fresh and timely perspective on the broader field of early postcolonial South Asian history"--

List of contents










Acknowledgements; Introduction Taylor C. Sherman, William Gould and Sarah Ansari; 1. Personal law and citizenship in India's transition to independence Eleanor Newbigin; 2. From subjects to citizens? Rationing, refugees and the publicity of corruption over independence in UP William Gould; 3. Performing peace: Gandhi's assassination as a critical moment in the consolidation of the Nehruvian state Yasmin Khan; 4. Migration, citizenship and belonging in Hyderabad (Deccan), 1946�56 Taylor C. Sherman; 5. Punjabi refugees' rehabilitation and the Indian state: discourses, denials and dissonances Ian Talbot; 6. Sovereignty, governmentality and development in Ayub's Pakistan: the case of Korangi Township Markus Daechsel; 7. Everyday expectations of the state during Pakistan's early years: letters to the Editor, Dawn (Karachi), 1950�53 Sarah Ansari; 8. Concrete 'progress': irrigation, development and modernity in mid-twentieth century Sind Daniel Haines; 9. Partition narratives: displaced trauma and culpability among British civil servants in 1940s Punjab Catherine Coombs; Contributors; Index.

About the author

Taylor C. Sherman is lecturer at Department of International History, London School of Economics. Dr Sherman's research concerns the cultural and political history of India in the transition from colonial rule to independence in the middle decades of the twentieth century. Her publications include State Violence and Punishment in India (2010).William Gould is professor of Indian History at School of History, University of Leeds. He researches on the politics of religious conflict and 'communalism' in South Asia, and the historical narratives of South Asian migrants to the UK after 1947. His publications include Hindu Nationalism and the Language of Politics in Late Colonial India (2004) and Religion and Conflict in South Asia (2012).Sarah Ansari is Reader at Department of History, Royal Holloway, University of London. Her research interests focus on the recent history of South Asia, in particular those parts of the subcontinent that became Pakistan in 1947.

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