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Lineages of the Present: Ideological and Political Genealogies of Contemporary South Asia,Used
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In March 1998, India broke a quartercenturys silence when it detonated a series of nuclear devices in the Rajasthan desert. Having announced it possessed the requisite credentials for membership in the nuclear club in 1974, India quickly disavowed any desire to join, pledging not to develop its capability further.. As the Pokhran explosions revealed, that promise would not be kept for ever, and the principal beneficiary of its breaking was now to be a rightwing government seeking to shore up its shaky political base by demonstrating its commitment to the Hindu bomb.While most in the West were taken unawares by this sudden bellicosity in the land of Ghandi, more scrupulous observers on the SouthAsian scene insisted it had a clear history. In this, his first book since the hotly debated In Theory, Aijaz Ahmad untangles many of the intertwined threads of historical and political traditions in a stilltoopoorlyunderstood region of the world.Opening with an essay on the politics of Partition, the book moves on to a close analysis of Pakistan politics in the Bhutto period, the construction of ideas of nation and community in Urdu literature, and the resurgence of fascism in the recent rise of Hindu fundamentalism. The book closes with a set of detailed reflections on the current situation: the story of the BJPs rise to prominence and government, the background to the nuclear flashpoint, and an analysis of IndoPakistan politics since the Pokhran explosions and up to the Indian general elections of October 1999 and the military takeover on Pakistan very shortly afterwards.Theoretically sophisticated, historically learned and politically provocative, Lineages of the Present offers Western readers a profound insight into the politics and history of contemporary South Asia and reveals Aijaz Ahmad as among its most lucid and authoritative analysts.
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