This article compares the public sphere of gurus (‘guru-sphere’) in contemporary Gujarat and that of Gandhi historically as important sites of political contestation. It argues that despite their common use of religious idioms to convey political ideas, Gandhi and the gurus authorise radically different political projects with divergent conceptions of the Hindu subject and Indian polity. The discursive activities of the guru-sphere have helped forge a dominant consensus that endorses Hindutva politics. Operating within a democratic civil society and borrowing from Gandhian idioms, gurus have actively challenged key constitutional values derived from the Gandhian public sphere. The study reveals the paradoxical tendency of Gujarat's public s...
M. K. Gandhi's "Discourses on the Gita," a series of talks delivered to ashramites at Sabarmati duri...
In North India, political leaders are referred to as netās, and the term netāgirī is broadly and pej...
This article proceeds from a critical reading of the role of religion for nation-building in India. ...
This article offers an interconnected, grounded understanding of how two Gandhian endeavours in the ...
This paper considers what light the associational forms that Gandhi created shed on the debate about...
This article explores Gandhi’s philosophy and methods of political struggle through the prism of the...
Book abstract: This book provides a set of fresh and compelling interdisciplinary approaches to th...
While Gandhi and Ambedkar hold similar standpoints on the relation between religious orderings of t...
This is an attempt to study critically the emergence and development of the new religious movement N...
This book provides a set of fresh and compelling interdisciplinary approaches to the enduring phenom...
Dealing with the key category of Hinduism imported from English linguistic habits (of “-isms’), some...
In this article, Hindu nationalism has been considered as an informal institution through an institu...
Mohandas Karamchand “Mahatma” Gandhi is known worldwide for his nonviolent fight to attain India’s i...
Since the structural change in Indian society that began in the 1990s - the result of the liberalisa...
India's caste system is a framework for societal limitations. The Rigveda's Purusha Sukta has the ea...
M. K. Gandhi's "Discourses on the Gita," a series of talks delivered to ashramites at Sabarmati duri...
In North India, political leaders are referred to as netās, and the term netāgirī is broadly and pej...
This article proceeds from a critical reading of the role of religion for nation-building in India. ...
This article offers an interconnected, grounded understanding of how two Gandhian endeavours in the ...
This paper considers what light the associational forms that Gandhi created shed on the debate about...
This article explores Gandhi’s philosophy and methods of political struggle through the prism of the...
Book abstract: This book provides a set of fresh and compelling interdisciplinary approaches to th...
While Gandhi and Ambedkar hold similar standpoints on the relation between religious orderings of t...
This is an attempt to study critically the emergence and development of the new religious movement N...
This book provides a set of fresh and compelling interdisciplinary approaches to the enduring phenom...
Dealing with the key category of Hinduism imported from English linguistic habits (of “-isms’), some...
In this article, Hindu nationalism has been considered as an informal institution through an institu...
Mohandas Karamchand “Mahatma” Gandhi is known worldwide for his nonviolent fight to attain India’s i...
Since the structural change in Indian society that began in the 1990s - the result of the liberalisa...
India's caste system is a framework for societal limitations. The Rigveda's Purusha Sukta has the ea...
M. K. Gandhi's "Discourses on the Gita," a series of talks delivered to ashramites at Sabarmati duri...
In North India, political leaders are referred to as netās, and the term netāgirī is broadly and pej...
This article proceeds from a critical reading of the role of religion for nation-building in India. ...