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Debating the 'Post' Condition in India - Critical Vernaculars, Unauthorized Modernities, Post-Colonial Contentions (Hardcover)
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Debating the 'Post' Condition in India - Critical Vernaculars, Unauthorized Modernities, Post-Colonial Contentions (Hardcover)
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How was the post-modernist project contested, subverted and
assimilated in India? This book offers a personal account and an
intellectual history of its reception and response. Tracing
independent India's engagement with Western critical theory,
Paranjape outlines both its past and 'post'. The book explores the
discursive trajectories of post-modernism, post-colonialism,
post-Marxism, post-nationalism, post-feminism, post-secularism -
the relations that mediate them - as well as interprets, in the
light of these discussions, core tenets of Indian philosophical
thought. Paranjape argues that India's response to the modernist
project is neither submission, willing or reluctant, nor
repudiation, intentional or forced; rather India's 'modernity' is
'unauthorized', different, subversive, alter-native and
alter-modern. The book makes the case for a new integrative
hermeneutics, the idea of the indigenous 'critical vernacular', and
presents a radical shift in the understanding of svaraj (beyond
decolonisation and nationalism) to express transformations at both
personal and political levels. A key intervention in Indian
critical theory, this volume will interest researchers and scholars
of literature, philosophy, political theory, culture studies and
postcolonial studies.
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