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In Search of the Collective Self: How Ethnic Group Concepts were Cast through Conflict in Colonial India
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 November 2008
Extract
When the concept of Western nationalism travelled to India in the nineteenth and the beginning of the twentieth century it was carried by British officialdom and an increasingly mobile and articulate Indian élite that was educated in English and in the tradition of British society. Not only did it inspire the all-India nationalist movement, but it encouraged regional politics as well, mainly in ethnic and religious terms. Most of today's ethnic and religious movements in South Asia could be traced back to their antecedents before independence. Looking closer at the three major regional movements of pre-independence India, the Pathans, the Sikhs and the Tamils, one finds a striking similarity in patterns of mobilization, conflict and concept irrespective of their association with the national movement (Red Shirt movement of the Pathans, Sikh movement of the Akalis) or independent existence in opposition to Congress (non-Brahmin/Tamil movement)
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References
An outline version of this paper was delivered at the symposium on ‘Changing Identities—The Self and the Other in Colonial Societies of Asia and Africa’, at the Centre for Modern Oriental Studies in Berlin, on 21–22 October 1993.
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