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Asian Studies STANFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS ASIAN STUDIES 20% DISCOUNT ON ALL TITLES 2021 TABLE OF CONTENTS South Asia in Motion ............. 2-5 Sociology ....................................5-6 Anthropology ............................ 6-7 Studies of the Walter H. Shorenstein Asia-Pacific Research Center ...........................8 History 9-11 ......................................... Asian America............................... 11 Cultural Studies ........................... 12 Studies in Asian Security ........ 13 Business and Economics ............................... 13-14 Politics .............................................14 Protestant Textuality and From Raj to Republic Examination Copy Policy .......14 the Tamil Modern Sovereignty, Violence, and Digital Publishing Initiative .... 15 Political Oratory and the Social Democracy in India Imaginary in South Asia Sunil Purushotham ORDERING Bernard Bate Between 1946 and 1952, the British Use code S21ASIA to receive a Edited by E. Annamalai, Francis Cody, Raj, the world’s largest colony, was 20% discount on all ISBNs listed in Malarvizhi Jayanth, and transformed into the Republic of India, sup.org this catalog. Visit to order Constantine V. Nakassis the world’s largest democracy. Inde- online. Books not yet published or temporarily out of stock will only Throughout history, speech and pendence, the Constituent Assembly be charged to your credit card storytelling have united communities Debates, the founding of the Republic, when they are shipped. and mobilized movements. Protestant and India’s first democratic general Textuality and the Tamil Modern election occurred amidst the violence examines this phenomenon in Tamil- and displacement of the Partition, the @stanfordpress speaking South India over the last contested integration of the princely three centuries, charting the develop- states, and the forceful quelling of facebook.com/ stanforduniversitypress ment of political oratory and its internal dissent. This book investigates influence on society. Supplementing the ways in which these violent Stanfordupress his narrative with thorough archival conjunctures constituted a postcolonial work, Bernard Bate shows how regime of sovereignty and shaped the Blog: stanfordpress. what originally began as a format of historical development of democracy typepad.com religious speech became an essential in India at the foundational moment of political infrastructure used to galvanize decolonization and national indepen- support for new social imaginaries, dence. From Raj to Republic presents from Indian independence to Tamil the story of how a national, territorial, nationalism. This ethnography republican, and liberal polity in India illuminates new geographies of emerged out of a violent and con- belonging in the modern era. tested process that forged new power “A brilliant demonstration of how relations and opened up historical speech genres can shape history, Bate’s trajectories with lasting consequences new book is a foundational, richly doc- for modern India. umented contribution to the study of comparative modernities, South Asian “A brilliantly original account of history, and political anthropology.” India’s Partition.” —Faisal Devji, —Richard Bauman, University of Oxford Indiana University, Bloomington 360 pages, January 2021 280 pages, August 2021 9781503614543 Paper $28.00 $22.40 sale 9781503628656 Paper $25.00 $20.00 sale 2 SOUTH ASIA IN MOTION A SERIES EDITED BY THOMAS BLOM HANSEN Special Treatment Nobody’s People The Greater India Experiment Student Doctors at the All India Hierarchy as Hope in a Hindutva and the Northeast Institute of Medical Sciences Society of Thieves Arkotong Longkumer Anna L. Ruddock Anastasia Piliavsky The assertion that even institutions The All India Institute of Medical What if we could imagine hierarchy often viewed as abhorrent should Sciences (AIIMS) is iconic in the not as a social ill, but as a source be dispassionately understood landscape of Indian healthcare of social hope? In Nobody’s People, motivates Arkotong Longkumer’s that also sits at the apex of Indian Anastasia Piliavsky takes us into pathbreaking ethnography of the medical education. To be trained the world of thieves, the Kanjars, in Sangh Parivar, a family of organiza- as a doctor here is to be considered the Indian state of Rajasthan and tions comprising the Hindu right. the best. In what way does this shows that, locally, hierarchy is a The Greater India Experiment coun- enduring reputation of excellence potent normative idiom through ters the urge to explain away their shape the institution’s ethos? How which Kanjars imagine better lives ideas and actions as inconsequential does elite medical education sus- and pursue social ambitions. Piliavsky by demonstrating their efforts to tain India’s social hierarchies and invites readers to see in hierarchy influence local politics and culture the health inequalities entrenched a viable ethical frame instead of in Northeast India. Longkumer within? In the first-ever ethnog- an archaic system of subjugation. constructs a comprehensive under- raphy of AIIMS, Anna Ruddock Doing so, she suggests, will help standing of Hindutva, an idea central to the establishment of a Hindu considers prestige as a byproduct us understand not only rural nation-state, by focusing on the of norms attached to ambition, Rajasthan, but also much of the Sangh Parivar’s engagement with aspiration, caste, and class in world, including settings stridently indigenous peoples in a region that modern India, and illustrates how committed to equality. Challenging has long resisted the “idea of India.” the institution’s reputation affects egalo-normative commitments, Contextualizing their activities as a its students’ present experiences Piliavsky asks scholars across the Hindutva “experiment” within the and future career choices. Ruddock disciplines to consider hierarchy as broader Indian political and cultural untangles the threads of intellectual a major intellectual resource. landscape, he ultimately paints a exceptionalism, social and power “This scintillating re-reading of unique picture of the country today. stratification, and health inequality, hierarchy picks apart one of anthro- asking what is lost when medicine pology’s greatest conundrums and “Subtle and surprising, this extraor- is used not as a social equalizer, oses profound questions for evaluations dinary study is essential reading for based on social equivalence.” anyone interested in contemporary but as a means to cultivate and Hindu nationalist politics.” maintain prestige? —Marilyn Strathern, University of Cambridge —Willem van Schendel, 264 pages, July 2021 University of Amsterdam 9781503628250 Paper $28.00 $22.40 sale 300 pages, November 2020 336 pages, December 2020 9781503614208 Paper $30.00 $24.00 sale 9781503614222 Paper $30.00 $24.00 sale SOUTH ASIA IN MOTION 3 A SERIES EDITED BY THOMAS BLOM HANSEN Brand New Nation Dying to Serve Faithful Fighters Capitalist Dreams and Militarism, Affect, and the Politics Identity and Power in the Nationalist Designs in of Sacrifice in the Pakistan Army British Indian Army Twenty-First-Century India Maria Rashid Kate Imy Ravinder Kaur The Pakistan Army is a uniquely During the first four decades of the The early twenty-first century was powerful and influential institution, twentieth century, the British Indian an optimistic moment of global with deep roots in the colonial Army possessed an illusion of racial futures-making. The chief nar- armed forces. It relies heavily on and religious inclusivity. The army rative was the emergence of the certain regions to supply its soldiers, recruited diverse soldiers, known BRIC nations branded afresh as especially parts of rural Punjab, as the “Martial Races,” including resource-rich hubs of untapped where men have served in the army British Christians, Hindustani talent and potential from the old for generations. In Dying to Serve, Muslims, Punjabi Sikhs, Hindu third world that “opened up” for Maria Rashid innovatively and Rajputs, Pathans from northwestern foreign investments. The tantaliz- sensitively addresses the question: India, and “Gurkhas” from Nepal. ing promise of economic growth how does the military thrive when As anti-colonial activism intensified, invited investments in the nation’s so much of its work results in injury, military officials incorporated some exciting futures; it also offered debility, and death? Rashid argues soldiers’ religious traditions into the utopian visions of “good times”, and that “spectacles of mourning” are army to keep them disciplined and even restoration of lost glory to the careful manipulations of affect, gen- loyal. In Faithful Fighters, Kate Imy explores how military culture cre- nation’s citizens. Grounded in the dered and structured by the military ated unintended dialogues between history of modern India, Brand New to reinforce its omnipotence. She soldiers and civilians, including Nation reveals the on-the-ground contends that understanding these Hindu nationalists, Sikh revivalists, experience of the relentless transfor- affective technologies is crucial and pan-Islamic activists. She argues mation of the nation-state into an to challenging the appeal of the that the army militarized racial and military institution globally. attractive investment destination for religious difference, creating lasting speculative global capital. “This highly original study shows legacies for the violent partition and “Brand New Nation takes us on a that we can learn about the appeal
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