1st Edition

State Violence and Punishment in India

By Taylor C. Sherman Copyright 2010
264 Pages
by Routledge

264 Pages
by Routledge

264 Pages
by Routledge

Exploring violent confrontation between the state and the population in colonial and postcolonial India, this book is both a study of the many techniques of colonial coercion and state violence and a cultural history of the different ways in which Indians imbued practices of punishment with their own meanings and reinterpreted acts of state violence in their own political campaigns. This work... Read more

1. Introduction  2. Jallianwala Bagh, the Punjab Disturbances of 1919, and the Limits of State Power in India, 1919-1920  3. Disobedience and Discord: The Non-Cooperation Movement, 1920-1925  4. Extra-Judicial Punishments and the Civil Disobedience Movement, 1930-1934  5. Legislating against Communal Violence: The United Provinces Goonda Act, and the Bombay Whipping Act, 1929-1938  6. The Hunger Strikes of the Lahore Conspiracy Case Prisoners, 1929-1938  7. The Second World War and India’s Coercive Network, 1939-1946  8. Partition and the Transitional State in India, 1947-1948  9. The Police action in Hyderabad and the Making of the Postcolonial State in India, 1947-1956  10. Conclusion

Biography

Taylor C. Sherman began her career teaching Extra-European history at the University of Cambridge, and is currently an AHRC Research Fellow at Royal Holloway, University of London.