1st Edition

Windows into a Revolution Ethnographies of Maoism in India and Nepal

Edited By Alpa Shah, Judith Pettigrew Copyright 2018
    350 Pages
    by Routledge

    350 Pages
    by Routledge

    Windows into a Revolution edited by Alpa Shah and Judith Pettigrew, the first book in the series offers glimpses into the spread of Maoism in India and Nepal by tracing some of its effects on the lives of ordinary people living amidst the revolutions. Weaving through the nostalgic reflections of former Bengali Naxalites; the resurgence of ancestral conflicts in the spread of the Maoists in the remote hills of western Nepal; the disillusionments of dalits of central Bihar in the policies of the cadres; to the complexities of the interrelationship between non-aligned civilians and insurgents in central Nepal, the book offers a series of windows into different stages of mobilization and transformation into what are, were or may become, revolutionary strongholds.


    Please note: Taylor & Francis does not sell or distribute the Hardback in India, Pakistan, Nepal, Bhutan, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka

    1. Windows in to a Revolution: Ethnographies of Maoism in India and Nepal — Alpa Shah and Judith Pettigrew 2. In Search of Certainty in Revolutionary India — Alpa Shah 3. The Formation of Political Consciousness in Rural Nepal Sara Shneiderman 4. Smouldering Dalit Fires in Bihar — George Kunnath 5. Reflections of a One-time Maoist Activist — Sumanta Banerjee 6. Radical Masculinity: Morality, Sociality and Relationships through Recollections of Naxalite Activists — Henrike Donner 7. Women’s Empowerment and Rural Revolution: Rethinking "Failed Development" Lauren G. Leve 8. From Ancestral Conflicts to Local Empowerment: Two Narratives from a Nep alese Community Anne de Sales 9. Terror in a Maoist Model Village in Mid-western Nepal Marie Lecomte -Tilouine 10. Fear and Everyday Life in Rural Nepal Judith Pettigrew with Kamal Adhikari 11. Anti-‘anti-witchcraft’ and the Maoist Insurgency in Rural Maharashtra Amit Desai 12. The Purification Hunt: The Salwa Judum Counterinsurgency in Chhattisgarh Jason Miklian 13. The Social Fabric of the Jelbang Killings — Deepak Thapa, Kiyoko Ogura and Judith Pettigrew

    Biography

    Alpa Shah is Senior Lecturer in Anthropology at Goldsmiths, University of London. Her research focuses on social inequality and efforts to address it and she has commented  on indigeneity, environmentalism, migration, development,  corruption, democracy, citizenship and the state. She is co-editor (with Tobias Kelly) of A Double Edged Sword: Protection and State Violence (2006) and author of In the Shadows of the State: Indigenous Politics, Environmentalism and Insurgency, Jharkhand (2010).



    Judith Pettigrew is Senior Lecturer in the Faculty of Education and Health Sciences at the University of Limerick, Ireland.  She has conducted  long-term anthropological research in Nepal since 1990 and has published widely on Nepal’s Maoist movement.  Her research on the everyday impacts of violence on rural people examines the interrelationships between space, emotional  life, violence and psychosocial wellbeing. Her forthcoming monograph is titled, Ethnography and Everyday Life in Nepal’s Civil War.