1st Edition

Social Spaces and the Public Sphere A Spatial-history of Modernity in Kerala

By S. Harikrishnan Copyright 2023
252 Pages 30 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge India

252 Pages 30 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge India

252 Pages 30 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge India

What can social spaces tell us about social relations in society? How do everyday social spaces like teashops, reading rooms, and libraries reify—or subvert—dominant social structures like caste and gender? These are the questions that this book explores through a study of modern Kerala. Using archival material, discourse analysis, participant observation, and personal interviews, this book... Read more

Foreword by Dilip Menon. Preface and Acknowledgements. 1. Introduction 2. Studying Space: Public Sphere and the Social Space 3. Making “Public”: Spatiality in Pre-modern to Early Modern Kerala 4. Moving “Out”: Nationalism, Socialism, and New Social Spaces 5. State, Capital, and the Struggle for Control 6. Capitalism, Communalism, and Social Spaces 7. Spatial Contests: Hegemony and Resistance

Biography

S.Harikrishnan is a postdoctoral researcher at Dublin City University, where he completed his PhD in political science. He holds an MA in International Political Economy from King's College London and an MA in Development Studies from Tata Institute of Social Sciences, Mumbai. Hari's research interests include the politics of space, modernity, religion, and political culture. His research has been published in Social History, Brill’s Handbook of Hinduism in Europe, and TripleC, and his bylines have appeared on The News Minute, Interactions, Newslaundry, and Kafila. Hari is also a photographer whose works have been exhibited in India, South Africa, and Ireland. He is a founding editor of Ala, a monthly online publication on Kerala. This is his first monograph.

“This book weaves a range of microdata from a wide-ranging but coherent set of historical and contemporary sources to build a careful narrative of public spaces and a fresh take on theories of autogestion. Ethnographic material on contemporary Kerala's impeccably grassroots organising stands in contrast to the many studies of Kerala's entrenched regime of rival parties, and insists upon the centrality of the social, the everyday, the experiential and embodied”Professor Caroline Osella, Research Associate, University of Sussex and
former Reader in Anthropology at SOAS, London