Culture, Vernacular Politics, and the Peasants: India, 1889-1950 : An Edited Translation of Swami Sahajanand Saraswati's Mera Jivan Sangharsh (My Life Struggle) /
India's twentieth-century struggle for political freedom was and remains an epic achievement in the human experience. Quite apart from its global influence, this is perhaps as familiar a story as it is remarkable, given the legacy of Gandhi, among others of that small generation of founders, who...
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Format: eBook
Language: English
Published:
Leiden ; Boston :
Brill | Manohar Publishers & Distributors,
2015.
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Call Number: DS481.S2
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| 245 | 0 | 0 | |a Culture, Vernacular Politics, and the Peasants: India, 1889-1950 : |b An Edited Translation of Swami Sahajanand Saraswati's Mera Jivan Sangharsh (My Life Struggle) / |c edited by Walter Hauser, Kailash Chandra Jha. |
| 246 | 3 | |a An Edited Translation of Swami Sahajanand Saraswati's Mera Jivan Sangharsh (My Life Struggle) | |
| 264 | 1 | |a Leiden ; |a Boston : |b Brill | Manohar Publishers & Distributors, |c 2015. | |
| 264 | 4 | |c ©2015 | |
| 300 | |a 1 online resource (760 pages) : |b illustrations. | ||
| 336 | |a text |b txt |2 rdacontent | ||
| 337 | |a computer |b c |2 rdamedia | ||
| 338 | |a online resource |2 rdacarrier | ||
| 504 | |a Includes bibliographical references and index. | ||
| 505 | 0 | |t Preliminary Material / |r Walter Hauser and Kailash Chandra Jha -- Sahajanand's Introduction: Why and What For? / |r Walter Hauser and Kailash Chandra Jha -- IA: The Beginnings / |r Walter Hauser and Kailash Chandra Jha -- IB: Middle School, High School and Renunciation / |r Walter Hauser and Kailash Chandra Jha -- IIA: The Ritual Wandering of a Young Ascetic / |r Walter Hauser and Kailash Chandra Jha -- IIB: A Time of Study / |r Walter Hauser and Kailash Chandra Jha -- IIC: From Social Service to Politics / |r Walter Hauser and Kailash Chandra Jha -- IIIA: My Entry Into Politics: The Congress Phase / |r Walter Hauser and Kailash Chandra Jha -- IIIB: The Kisan Sabha: The Reform Phase / |r Walter Hauser and Kailash Chandra Jha -- IIIC: The Kisan Sabha: The Militant, Revolutionary Phase / |r Walter Hauser and Kailash Chandra Jha -- IV: The 1946 Addendum / |r Walter Hauser and Kailash Chandra Jha -- Index / |r Walter Hauser and Kailash Chandra Jha. | |
| 520 | |a India's twentieth-century struggle for political freedom was and remains an epic achievement in the human experience. Quite apart from its global influence, this is perhaps as familiar a story as it is remarkable, given the legacy of Gandhi, among others of that small generation of founders, whose unique leadership roles are rightly considered to have been transformational in the achievement of freedom in 1947, and in the promulgation of the Constitution of January 1950. But it must then also be said that the roles of the founding leadership were balanced and in many ways defined by the people of India themselves, primarily its peasants, whether the generic masses of Gandhi's definition and direction, or the independent and self aware peasants of the field. It is this broader peasant story, and particularly that of the deeply engaged peasants of the kisan andolan, the peasant movement of the late 1920s and the 1930s, that appears here in the words of Swami Sahajanand Saraswati. It was their shared experience, or as Sahajanand put it more pointedly and more accurately, their common struggle. In fact, Sahajanand and the peasants had lived this history, and the Swami recorded it for posterity in his 1952 Hindi memoir Mera Jivan Sangharsh ( My Life Struggle ), translated here for the first time by Walter Hauser and Kailash Jha. Given Sahajanand's direct involvement in this history, his representation of the peasant story from the perspective of the peasants amounts to a paradigm shift in how the lives of the peasants of India have been understood and represented over time, either in politics or in scholarship. The intimacy, detail, and ethnographic richness of peasant activism as conveyed by Sahajanand is simply unique. This is true for many reasons, not least because the peasants understood fully what their struggles and movement meant, not only in social, cultural, and economic terms, but equally so in political, conceptual, and ultimately in human terms. It was their voice, loud and clear, and hence their history. | ||
| 546 | |a English | ||
| 588 | |a Description based on print version record. | ||
| 650 | 0 | |a Nationalists |z India |v Biography. | |
| 700 | 1 | |a Chandra Jha, Kailash, |e editor. | |
| 700 | 1 | |a Hauser, Walter, |e editor. | |
| 776 | 0 | 8 | |i Print version: |t Culture, Vernacular Politics, and the Peasants: India, 1889-1950 : An Edited Translation of Swami Sahajanand Saraswati's Mera Jivan Sangharsh (My Life Struggle). |d Leiden ; Boston : Brill | Manohar Publishers & Distributors, 2015. |z 9789350980842 |w (OCoLC)908830691 |w (DLC) 2015358033 |
| 856 | 4 | |z DOI: |u http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/9789004753921 | |
| 942 | |2 lcc |c EBOOK | ||
| 999 | |c 61605 |d 61605 | ||
