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Religion and the Specter of the West - Sikhism, India, Postcoloniality, and the Politics of Translation (Paperback)
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Religion and the Specter of the West - Sikhism, India, Postcoloniality, and the Politics of Translation (Paperback)
Series: Insurrections: Critical Studies in Religion, Politics, and Culture
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Arguing that intellectual movements, such as deconstruction,
postsecular theory, and political theology, have different
implications for cultures and societies that live with the
debilitating effects of past imperialisms, Arvind Mandair unsettles
the politics of knowledge construction in which the category of
"religion" continues to be central. Through a case study of
Sikhism, he launches an extended critique of religion as a cultural
universal. At the same time, he presents a portrait of how certain
aspects of Sikh tradition were reinvented as "religion" during the
late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. India's imperial
elite subtly recast Sikh tradition as a sui generis religion, which
robbed its teachings of their political force. In turn, Sikhs began
to define themselves as a "nation" and a "world religion" that was
separate from, but parallel to, the rise of the Indian state and
global Hinduism. Rather than investigate these processes in
isolation from Europe, Mandair shifts the focus closer to the
political history of ideas, thereby recovering part of Europe's
repressed colonial memory. Mandair rethinks the intersection of
religion and the secular in discourses such as history of
religions, postcolonial theory, and recent continental philosophy.
Though seemingly unconnected, these discourses are shown to be
linked to a philosophy of "generalized translation" that emerged as
a key conceptual matrix in the colonial encounter between India and
the West. In this riveting study, Mandair demonstrates how this
philosophy of translation continues to influence the repetitions of
religion and identity politics in the lives of South Asians, and
the way the academy, state, and media have analyzed such phenomena.
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