Power, Resistance and Development in the Global South: Notes Towards a Critical Research Agenda
In: International journal of politics, culture and society
ISSN: 0891-4486
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In: International journal of politics, culture and society
ISSN: 0891-4486
In: Critical sociology, Band 43, Heft 4-5, S. 559-571
ISSN: 1569-1632
The 2013 publication of Vivek Chibber's book Postcolonial Theory and the Specter of Capital has reignited debates over the relative merits and demerits of Marxism and postcolonialism. This article reviews the debate and raises some critical questions about Chibber's engagement with questions pertaining to universalism and capitalist development. Focusing on Chibber's critique of Dipesh Chakrabarty's Provincializing Europe, the article contends that whereas Chibber is right in arguing for a concept of universal history, the approach he offers towards this end pushes in the direction of Eurocentrism. As an alternative, the article proposes the possibility of crafting passages from Marxism to postcolonialism in order to move beyond Eurocentrism in the historical-sociological study of capitalist development.
Focusing on recent debates over the ways in which subaltern groups engage with the state in India, the article proposes that it is imperative to historicise our conceptions of subaltern politics in India. More specifically, the argument is made that it is imperative to recognise that subaltern appropriations of the institutions and discourses of the state have a longer historical lineage than what is often proposed in critical work on popular resistance in rural India. The article presents a detailed analysis of Adivasi rebellions in colonial western India and argues that these took the form of a contentious negotiation of the incorporation of tribal communities into an emergent "colonial state space." The conclusion presents a sketch of a Gramscian approach to the study of how subaltern politics proceeds in and through determinate state–society relations. ; publishedVersion
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In: Capital & class, Band 37, Heft 3, S. 516-518
ISSN: 2041-0980
In: Capital & class: CC, Band 37, Heft 3, S. 516-518
ISSN: 0309-8168
In: Journal of poverty: innovations on social, political & economic inequalities, Band 17, Heft 4, S. 460-492
ISSN: 1540-7608
In: Capital & class, Band 36, Heft 3, S. 559-562
ISSN: 2041-0980
In: Critical sociology, Band 39, Heft 4, S. 615-633
ISSN: 1569-1632
This article addresses the political aspects of the structural marginalization of Adivasis (Scheduled Tribes) in India. Relating to critical debates about the changing nature of state–society relations in India, the article assesses the argument that the best way for social movements in India to advance their oppositional projects is to harness the state to their attempts to deepen democracy and advance subaltern emancipation. The trajectories of two Adivasi movements in western Madhya Pradesh are analysed, and I discuss the conceptual and political lessons that can be learnt from these case studies in terms of the relationship between subaltern politics and state power in contemporary India. Theoretically grounded in Marxian state theory, the article puts forward the argument that it is necessary to move beyond both anti-statism and state-centrism in order to develop a politically enabling engagement with contemporary Adivasi mobilization in India.
In: Capital & class: CC, Band 36, Heft 3, S. 559-562
ISSN: 0309-8168
In: Critical Asian studies, Band 44, Heft 2, S. 251-282
ISSN: 1472-6033
In: Critical Asian studies, Band 44, Heft 2, S. 251-282
ISSN: 1467-2715
The question of the state has come to occupy a central place in recent debates on subaltern politics in contemporary India. Against those critical voices that have claimed that the emancipation of subaltern groups can only proceed by challenging and moving beyond the modern Indian state, a range of scholars and commentators have asserted that it is precisely by seeking to harness the state that social movements can hope to advance their oppositional projects. Intervening in this debate, this article argues that although these new perspectives constitute a decisive advance in terms of developing a relational understanding of subaltern politics in India, questions pertaining to the structural constraints that social movements face in advancing their oppositional projects through the institutions and discourses of the state are still neglected. The article addresses these questions through a detailed exploration of the ways in and extent to which Adivasi movements have managed to democratize local state-society relationships in western Madhya Pradesh, and discusses the conceptual and political lessons that can be drawn from these experiences. Drawing on recent advances in Marxian state theory, the article argues that it is necessary to move beyond the theoretical impasses of both anti-statism and state-centrism and toward a politically enabling engagement with contemporary Adivasi mobilization in India. (Crit Asian Stud/GIGA)
World Affairs Online
In: Pacific affairs, Band 84, Heft 4, S. 794-797
ISSN: 0030-851X
In: Capital & class: CC, Heft 99, S. 109-139
ISSN: 0309-8168
In: Journal of historical sociology, Band 21, Heft 2-3, S. 303-330
ISSN: 1467-6443
Abstract In this article, I put forward a Marxian analysis of the conflict over dam‐building on the Narmada River in central and western India, which seeks to bring out how in this specific conflict it is possible to discern the workings of the master change processes that have moulded the Indian trajectory of postcolonial capitalist development. I start by showing how the concrete case of dispossession in the Narmada Valley is expressive of how the development strategies that defined the postcolonial nation‐building project have been moulded in such a way as to create a de facto transfer of productive resources to the country's dominant proprietary classes. I then move on to argue that these features of the political economy of India's postcolonial development project can be understood as the sediment of struggles between social movements from above and below in the decades immediately prior to Independence. Arguing that the postcolonial development project has unravelled, I outline the fundamentals of an analysis of the characteristics of social movements from below in the conflictual field of force which is emerging in its wake. Finally, I draw on the trajectory of resistance to dam‐building on the Narmada to articulate a series of reflections on the nature of state power in India and the possibilities that might exist for the state to function as an enabling space for the struggles of subaltern social groups.
In: Capital & class: CC, Heft 94, S. 146-150
ISSN: 0309-8168