Communalism in the Punjab: The Arya Samaj Contribution
Citations Over TimeTop 10% of 1968 papers
Abstract
Few features of modern South Asian history have received more comment than communalism, its impact on the development of nationalism and its threat to the continued existence of a secular Indian state. For many supporters of Indian nationalism, communalism was the result of British machinations, of a “divide and rule” policy used to impede and, finally, to frustrate the ambitions of those who desired a free, united India. For the proponents of Pakistan, communalism was not an issue, since they premised their actions on the concept of “two nations,” one Hindu and one Islamic, which both sought to establish themselves as political entities. Their world was defined by religion and what others called communalism was nationalism in such a world. Communalism exists as a historic reality and a common though ambiguous and increasingly pejorative analytic concept.
Related Papers
- → Situating Hindu nationalism in the UK: Vishwa Hindu Parishad and the development of British Hindu identity(2010)26 cited
- → Holy science: the biopolitics of Hindu nationalism(2021)3 cited
- → The Hinduism and Hindu Nationalism of Lala Lajpat Rai(2023)1 cited
- → William Gould, Hindu Nationalism and the Language of Politics in Late Colonial India(2022)
- → Killing for the Hindu Nation(2023)