In this book, the prominent theorist Partha Chatterjee looks at
the creative and powerful results of the nationalist imagination in
Asia and Africa that are posited not on identity but on difference
with the nationalism propagated by the West. Arguing that scholars
have been mistaken in equating political nationalism with
nationalism as such, he shows how anticolonialist nationalists
produced their own domain of sovereignty within colonial society
well before beginning their political battle with the imperial
power. These nationalists divided their culture into material and
spiritual domains, and staked an early claim to the spiritual
sphere, represented by religion, caste, women and the family, and
peasants. Chatterjee shows how middle-class elites first imagined
the nation into being in this spiritual dimension and then readied
it for political contest, all the while "normalizing" the
aspirations of the various marginal groups that typify the
spiritual sphere.
While Chatterjee's specific examples are drawn from Indian
sources, with a copious use of Bengali language materials, the book
is a contribution to the general theoretical discussion on
nationalism and the modern state. Examining the paradoxes involved
with creating first a uniquely non-Western nation in the spiritual
sphere and then a universalist nation-state in the material sphere,
the author finds that the search for a postcolonial modernity is
necessarily linked with past struggles against modernity.
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