Politics, Ethics and the Self: Re-Reading Gandhi's Hind Swaraj
Cover -- Half Title -- Title -- Copyright -- Contents -- List of contributors -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction -- Part 1 The truncated ethic of modern civilization -- 1 The originality of Hind Swaraj -- 2 Gandhi and the debate about civilization -- 3 English rule without the Englishman: citizenship, subalternity, and Gandhi's 'reader' -- 4 Reflections on Gandhi's anti-modernism -- 5 Hind Swaraj: a historical necessity -- 6 On the normative structure of Gandhian thought: with special reference to Hind Swaraj -- Part 2 Empire, politics, and violence -- 7 Empire and violence, or the foes in Hind Swaraj -- 8 Political self-rule: Gandhi and the future of democracy -- 9 Politics and violence: Gandhi's ambivalence to democracy -- 10 A nationalism open towards the world -- Part 3 Colonization of minds -- 11 Learning from the South: Gandhi and intercultural translation -- 12 Beyond decolonizing knowledge: revisiting the Svaraj in ideas debate -- 13 Gandhi and political praxis of Educational reconstruction, 1909-1938 -- Part 4 Cultivating self -- 14 Could Hind Swaraj presuppose a theory of judgment? -- 15 Gandhi: calling to non-violence joined by a strong pragmatism -- 16 Afterlife of a text: Hind Swaraj and the Chhattisgarh Mukti Morcha -- 17 Sheherezade and Hind Swaraj -- 18 Gandhi's Twin fasts and the possibility of non-violence -- Part 5 How to read Hind Swaraj -- 19 Reading Hind Swarajya/Swaraj in two languages -- Index.