Citizenship, community and the state in western India : the moulding of a Marathi-speaking province, 1930s-1950s

This thesis examines how ideas about citizenship emerged out of the mutually constitutive relationship between the ‘everyday’ state and society in the specific region of Maharashtra, western India. By concentrating upon Maharashtra between the 1930s and 1950s, it looks to provide new perspectives up...

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Main Author: Godsmark, Oliver James
Other Authors: Gould, William ; Major, Andrea
Published: University of Leeds 2013
Subjects:
900
Online Access:https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.758276
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-7582762019-03-05T15:48:14ZCitizenship, community and the state in western India : the moulding of a Marathi-speaking province, 1930s-1950sGodsmark, Oliver JamesGould, William ; Major, Andrea2013This thesis examines how ideas about citizenship emerged out of the mutually constitutive relationship between the ‘everyday’ state and society in the specific region of Maharashtra, western India. By concentrating upon Maharashtra between the 1930s and 1950s, it looks to provide new perspectives upon the construction of citizenship in India during this formative period, thereby complementing, building upon and re-contextualising recent scholarship that has been principally interested in deciphering the repercussions of independence and partition in the north of the subcontinent. This thesis suggests that the reasons why Maharashtrians supported the reorganisation of provincial administrative boundaries on linguistic lines were intrinsically linked to ideas and performances of citizenship that had emerged in the past few decades at the local level. Despite the state’s interactions with its citizens being theoretically based upon accountability, objectivity and egalitarianism, they often diverged from these hyperbolical principles in practice. Because local state actors, who were drawn from amongst regional societies themselves, came to be subjected to pressures from particular sub-sets, groups, factions and communities within this regional society, or shared the same exigencies and sentimental concerns as its ordinary members of the public, the circumstances in which citizenship was conceptualised, articulated and enacted within India differed from one location to the next. Perceptions of the state amongst ordinary Indians, and their sense of belonging to and relationship with it were thus formulated in the discrepant spaces between the state’s high-sounding morals and values, and its regionally specific customs and practices on the ground.900University of Leedshttps://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.758276http://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/4958/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 900
spellingShingle 900
Godsmark, Oliver James
Citizenship, community and the state in western India : the moulding of a Marathi-speaking province, 1930s-1950s
description This thesis examines how ideas about citizenship emerged out of the mutually constitutive relationship between the ‘everyday’ state and society in the specific region of Maharashtra, western India. By concentrating upon Maharashtra between the 1930s and 1950s, it looks to provide new perspectives upon the construction of citizenship in India during this formative period, thereby complementing, building upon and re-contextualising recent scholarship that has been principally interested in deciphering the repercussions of independence and partition in the north of the subcontinent. This thesis suggests that the reasons why Maharashtrians supported the reorganisation of provincial administrative boundaries on linguistic lines were intrinsically linked to ideas and performances of citizenship that had emerged in the past few decades at the local level. Despite the state’s interactions with its citizens being theoretically based upon accountability, objectivity and egalitarianism, they often diverged from these hyperbolical principles in practice. Because local state actors, who were drawn from amongst regional societies themselves, came to be subjected to pressures from particular sub-sets, groups, factions and communities within this regional society, or shared the same exigencies and sentimental concerns as its ordinary members of the public, the circumstances in which citizenship was conceptualised, articulated and enacted within India differed from one location to the next. Perceptions of the state amongst ordinary Indians, and their sense of belonging to and relationship with it were thus formulated in the discrepant spaces between the state’s high-sounding morals and values, and its regionally specific customs and practices on the ground.
author2 Gould, William ; Major, Andrea
author_facet Gould, William ; Major, Andrea
Godsmark, Oliver James
author Godsmark, Oliver James
author_sort Godsmark, Oliver James
title Citizenship, community and the state in western India : the moulding of a Marathi-speaking province, 1930s-1950s
title_short Citizenship, community and the state in western India : the moulding of a Marathi-speaking province, 1930s-1950s
title_full Citizenship, community and the state in western India : the moulding of a Marathi-speaking province, 1930s-1950s
title_fullStr Citizenship, community and the state in western India : the moulding of a Marathi-speaking province, 1930s-1950s
title_full_unstemmed Citizenship, community and the state in western India : the moulding of a Marathi-speaking province, 1930s-1950s
title_sort citizenship, community and the state in western india : the moulding of a marathi-speaking province, 1930s-1950s
publisher University of Leeds
publishDate 2013
url https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.758276
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