The Ascendancy of the Congress in Uttar Pradesh

The Ascendancy of the Congress in Uttar Pradesh

Author: Gyanendra Pandey

Publisher: Anthem Press

Published: 2002-07

Total Pages: 265

ISBN-13: 9781843317623

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Investigates the social contradictions, class forces and efforts at political organization that lay behind the powerful nationalist movement in Uttar Pradesh the 1920s and '30s.


The Ascendancy of the Congress in Uttar Pradesh

The Ascendancy of the Congress in Uttar Pradesh

Author: Gyanendra Pandey

Publisher: Anthem Press

Published: 2002-07-01

Total Pages: 264

ISBN-13: 0857287621

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A revised edition of the classic monograph, 'The Ascendancy of the Congress in Uttar Pradesh' investigates the social contradictions, class forces, and efforts at political organization and mobilization that lay behind the emergence of a powerful nationalist movement in Uttar Pradesh in the late 1920s and early 1930s. It also considers the concurrent emergence of Hindu–Muslim differences as a major factor affecting nationalist politics and the anti-colonial struggle in India.


Political Process in Uttar Pradesh

Political Process in Uttar Pradesh

Author: Sudha Pai

Publisher: Pearson Education India

Published: 2007

Total Pages: 472

ISBN-13: 9788131707975

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The essays in this volume present a complex picture of the major upheavals that UP has experienced in its society, polity, and economy over the last two decades.


Print and the Urdu Public

Print and the Urdu Public

Author: Megan Eaton Robb

Publisher: Oxford University Press

Published: 2020-10-19

Total Pages: 224

ISBN-13: 0190089393

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In early twentieth century British India, prior to the arrival of digital medias and after the rise of nationalist political movements, a small-town paper from the margins of society became a key player in Urdu journalism. Published in the isolated market town of Bijnor, Madinah grew to hold influence across North India and the Punjab while navigating complex issues of religious and political identity. In Print and the Urdu Public, Megan Robb uses the previously unexamined perspective of the Madinah to consider Urdu print publics and urban life in South Asia. Through a discursive and material analysis of Madinah, the book explores how Muslims who had settled in ancestral qasbahs, or small towns, used newspapers to facilitate a new public consciousness. The book demonstrates how Madinah connected the Urdu newspaper conversation both explicitly and implicitly with Muslim identity and delineated the boundaries of a Muslim public conversation in a way that emphasized rootedness to local politics and small urban spaces. The case study of this influential but understudied newspaper reveals how a network of journalists with substantial ties to qasbahs produced a discourse self-consciously alternative to the Western-influenced, secularized cities. Megan Robb augments the analysis with evidence from contemporary Urdu, English, and Hindi papers, government records, private diaries, private library holdings, ethnographic interviews, and training materials for newspaper printers. This thoroughly researched volume recovers the erasure of qasbah voices and proclaims the importance of space and time in definitions of the public sphere in South Asia. Print and the Urdu Public demonstrates how an Urdu newspaper published from the margins became central to the Muslim public constituted in the first half of the twentieth century.