Power, Politics and the People


Book Description

An original and groundbreaking look at the encounter between British imperialism and Indian nationalism.







Nations without States


Book Description

Russians are suppressing the Chechen; Ibo nationalism may yet tear Nigeria apart. With the end of the Cold War, any of the world's stateless peoples could be in tomorrow's headlines. This book provides an essential guide to the stateless nations suppressed or ignored during the Cold War. In more than 200 national surveys, the volume highlights the historical, political, social, economic, and diplomatic evolution of many of the currently emerging nations without states. Including nations from all continents—from the Chechen in Eastern Europe, to the Ibo in Africa, and the Quebeckers in North America—the book addresses the current nationalist resurgence by focusing on the most basic element of any nationalism, the nation itself. The book provides the only source of concise information on stateless nations. Each entry includes the nation's name and alternative names, population statistics, information on major languages and religions, geographical information, independence declarations, information on the national flag, a brief sketch of the primary national group or groups, and a profile of the nation's history and national development to the present. A chronological appendix of declarations of independence helps to set the waves of nationalism in an historical context. A second appendix provides a geographic listing, by region and nation, of national organizations.




How India Clothed the World


Book Description

Cloth has always been the most global of all traded commodities. It is an illuminating example of the circulation of goods, skills, knowledge and capital across wide geographic spaces. South Asia has been central to the making of these global exchanges over time. This volume presents innovative research that explores the dynamic ways in which diverse textile production and trade regions generated the first globalization . A series of experts connect this global commodity with the dramatic political and economic transformations that characterised the Indian Ocean in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Collectively, the essays transform our understanding of the contribution of South Asian cloth to the making of the modern world economy.




Regionalism in Canada


Book Description

Canada, one of the highly developed countries in the world, has been historically, politically and culturally regarded a regionalised nation. Today, Canada appears to be in an ambivalent situation: on the one hand regional parties such as the Reform Party in the West and the Bloc Quebecois in Quebec testify to the rise of regional tenancies. On the other, growth of global economy has pulled various Canadian regions in different directions, depending on their economic linkages with the rest of the world. The papers presented in the book constitute a fair representation of multidisciplinary study by Indian scholars on this sensitive and important subject. They bring together relevant current research on the significane of Regionalism in Canada, with some reflections on India as well. This collection contributes to the understanding of some of the essential issues of Canadian regionalism.







Narrating Colonialism


Book Description

This Book Provides A Fascinating Portrait Gallery Of The British Imperialists, The Memsahibs And The Anti-Imperialists Caught In The Ideological Conflict Resulting From Colonization.




The Handloom Industry of Begampur in Transition


Book Description

The Handloom Industry of Begampur in Transition: Technology, Disjuncture and Development provides an ethnographic description of the handloom industry of the Begampur region, Hooghly district, West Bengal, India. While explaining the process of transformation within the industry, Abhradip Banerjee explores the uneasy relationship between technology, disjuncture, and development that has impacted the lives of this particular group of artisans for more than two decades. The novelty of this book lies in Banerjee’s approach, which allowed him to perceive and analyze the process of transition within the handloom weaving tradition of Begampur region from a more inclusive perspective, miles away from the pitfall of gross “technological determinism.” The “sociotechnical approach allowed him to gauge, analyze, and incorporate several important but neglected dimensions of this transformation, which were otherwise missing in many historiographic or empirical accounts regarding the process of industrialization, deindustrialization, and class formation in India.




Canadiana


Book Description