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Politics after television : religious nationalism and the reshaping of the Indian public / Arvind Rajagopal

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2001Description: viii, 393p, 23cmISBN:
  • 0521648394
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 306.20954 RAJ
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Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Book Book Calcutta 306.20954 RAJ (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available IIMC-123763
Total holds: 0

In January 1987, the Indian state-run television began broadcasting a Hindu epic in serial form, The Ramayana, to nationwide audiences, violating a decades-old taboo on religious partisanship. What resulted was the largest political campaign in post-independence times, around the symbol of Lord Ram. The complexion of Indian politics was irrevocably changed thereafter. In this book, the author analyses this extraordinary series of events. While audiences may have thought they were harking back to an epic golden age, Hindu nationalist leaders were embracing the prospects of neoliberalism and globalisation. Television was the device that hinged these movements together, symbolising the new possibilities of politics, at once more inclusive and authoritarian. Simultaneously, this study examines how the larger historical context was woven into and changed the character of Hindu nationalism.

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