Waiting for Swaraj : the inner lives of Indian Revolutionaries / Aparna Vaidik.
By: Vaidik, Aparna [author.]
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BookPublisher: New York Cambridge Univ. Press 2021Description: 231p.ISBN: 9781108838085.Other title: Inner lives of Indian Revolutionaries.Subject(s): Hindustan Socialist Republican Association -- History| Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Indian Institute of Public Administration On Display | B253x54 V191 (Browse shelf) | Available | 88656 |
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| B253x54 R211 State of democracy in India: essays on life and politics in contemporary times | B253x54 Sa97d Divorce and democracy | B253x54 Si93 Indian democracy: | B253x54 V191 Waiting for Swaraj : | B253x54 V82u Uncivil liberalism: labour, capital and commercial society in Dadabhai Naoroji's political thought | B253x5413 B299 Reclaiming indigeneity and democracy in India's Jharkhand / | B253x5431 D642 Unbreaking India: decisions on Article 370 and the CAA |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
The Revolutionary-Who-Waits -- Satyagrahi to Krantikari -- Between Inquilab and Kranti -- The Ascetic Kaalyoddha.
"Set in British India of the 1920s, Waiting for Swaraj follows the cadence and tempo of the lives of the intrepid revolutionaries of the Hindustan Republican Association and the Hindustan Republican Socialist Association, two organizations that challenged the occupational forces of the time. This book seeks to comprehend the revolutionaries' self-conception and dwells on some of the key questions like: what makes a revolutionary? What did it mean to be a revolutionary? How did a revolutionary live out the vision of revolution? Did life in revolution transform an individual; what was their truth and how was it different from that of the others? It locates the essence of being a revolutionary not just in the spectacular moments when the revolutionaries threw a bomb or carried out a political assassination but studies them in everyday conversations, banter, anecdotes, and in the stray fragments of the life in underground. This book demonstrates how 'waiting' was the crucible that forged a revolutionary. It did so not by robbing the young men of the romance of resistance but by coddling, nurturing, and emboldening it. This monograph is an exploration of the rich, variegated, and intimate history of revolution as praxis. Moving away from a traditional model the author experiments with methodology and style of narration in Waiting for Swaraj. Written in lucid prose, it ambitions to appeal to a much wider audience beyond the academia"--


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