India's spatial imaginations of South Asia : power, commerce, and community / Shibashis Chatterjee.
Material type:
- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 9780199489886 (hardcover)
- 0199489882 (hardcover)
- 327.54 CHA 23 013104
- DS446.3 .C525 2019
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Indian Institute for Human Settlements, Bangalore | 327.54 CHA 013104 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 013104 |
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327.54 AYR 012443 Our time has come : | 327.54 BHA 018453 The third eye of governance : rise of populism, decline in social research / | 327.54 CHA 010041 The idea of nation and its future in India / | 327.54 CHA 013104 India's spatial imaginations of South Asia : | 327.54 ENG 005804 The engagement of India : | 327.54 ENG 008827 Engaging the world : | 327.54 IND 007594 India in the contemporary world : |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 197-218) and index.
By mapping India's spatial imaginations underlying Indian foreign policy toward South Asia, Shibashis Chatterjee argues that India's understanding of its neighbourhood is informed by a politics of realism as South Asia remains a 'space' defined in terms of power and sovereign territoriality in contrast to alternative imaginations based on the market or community. This understanding is one of India's ruling elites consisting of politicians, cutting across party lines, key bureaucrats, army chiefs, and influential policy intellectuals. While alternative imagination/s of South Asia is indeed ideationally possible, the politics necessary to make this happen is virtually nonexistent. While India's relations with neighbours have varied with regimes over time, these have moved between fixed points of references, constituted by its imagination of South Asia as a space of power and territorial control. The book tells a story of India's spatial imaginations of its neighbourhood and reveals how the differentiated cartography of territorial nationalism still looms large on our shared ontology of social space.
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