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Delhi Reborn

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Delhi, one of the world's largest cities, has faced momentous challenges—mass migration, competing governing authorities, controversies over citizenship, and communal violence. To understand the co...
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  • 16 August 2022
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Delhi, one of the world's largest cities, has faced momentous challenges—mass migration, competing governing authorities, controversies over citizenship, and communal violence. To understand the contemporary plight of India's capital city, this book revisits one of the most dramatic episodes in its history, telling the story of how the city was remade by the twin events of partition and independence. Treating decolonization as a process that unfolded from the late 1930s into the mid-1950, Rotem Geva traces how India and Pakistan became increasingly territorialized in the imagination and practice of the city's residents, how violence and displacement were central to this process, and how tensions over belonging and citizenship lingered in the city and the nation. She also chronicles the struggle, after 1947, between the urge to democratize political life in the new republic and the authoritarian legacy of colonial rule, augmented by the imperative to maintain law and order in the face of the partition crisis. Drawing on a wide range of sources, Geva reveals the period from the late 1930s to the mid-1950s as a twilight time, combining features of imperial framework and independent republic. Geva places this liminality within the broader global context of the dissolution of multiethnic and multireligious empires into nation-states and argues for an understanding of state formation as a contest between various lines of power, charting the links between different levels of political struggle and mobilization during the churning early years of independence in Delhi.

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Price: $30.00
Pages: 368
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Imprint: Stanford University Press
Series: South Asia in Motion
Publication Date: 16 August 2022
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781503632110
Format: Paperback
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"This elegantly written book sheds fresh light on issues of violence, migration, citizenship, and the politics of self-expression. It enriches both the narrativization of Partition and historical understanding of India's contemporary emergence as an ethnic democracy."—Ian Talbot, University of Southampton
Rotem Geva is Lecturer in Asian Studies and History at The Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
Introduction
1. Dreaming Independence in the Colonial Capital
2. Partition Violence Shatters Utopia
3. An Uncertain State Confronts "Evacuee Property"
4. Claiming the City and Nation in the Urdu Press
5. Citizens' Rights: Delhi's Law and Order Legacy
Epilogue