Revolutionary Pamphlets Propaganda and Political Culture in Colonial Bengal /
Material type:
- 9781107065468
- 954/.14035 Sh923 R 102042
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Ubhayabharati General Stacks | Non-fiction | 954/.14035 Sh923 R 102042 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 102042 |
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934 Su773 S 102322 Society in Ancient India : | 934.1 M3148 P 102093 Prehistory and Archaeology of Northeast India : | 951.05092 Al263 M 101993 Mao's Little Red Book : | 954/.14035 Sh923 R 102042 Revolutionary Pamphlets Propaganda and Political Culture in Colonial Bengal / | 954/.60072 C448 K 102129 Kashmir's contested pasts : | 954/.8 R385 S 102047 A Social History of the Deccan 1300–1761 : | 954 Ar89 D 102249 Decolonizing Indian studies / |
Pamphlets have usually been regarded as ephemeral literature with little permanent impact. This work demonstrates the historical value of this genre of political literature. The propaganda pamphlets help historians place a finger on the pulse of an extraordinarily important historical period when new ideas concerning the nation-state the rights of the governed and forms of political protest complicated the political scene and opened up new fronts of conflict between the colonial state and the colonized subjects. This study devises innovative approaches to reading these pamphlets and generates new insights into the world of the pamphleteers thus providing the readers with a more nuanced understanding of the politics and political culture of early twentieth century Bengal. In the process the book makes an important contribution to the historical controversies that the politics of this period has generated among scholars of Indian nationalism
The origins of an idea -- Signs of the times : constructing a nation -- Legitimizing violence -- The battle for domination : state represssion of revolutionary pamphlets -- Summin up : an identity forged in battle -- Conclusion.
"Studies the pamphlet propaganda that was disseminated by the revolutionary terrorists in early twentieth century Bengal as a means of mobilizing support for the revolutionary movement through which they hoped to overthrow the colonial state"--
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