Description
Edward Cameron Dimock, Jr., Prize in the Indian Humanities, American Institute of Indian Studies What makes someone willing to die, not for a nation, but for a language? In the mid-20th century, southern India saw a wave of dramatic suicides in the name of language. Lisa Mitchell traces the colonial-era changes in knowledge and practice linked to the Telugu language that lay behind some of these events. As identities based on language came to appear natural, the road was paved for the political reorganization of the Indian state along linguistic lines after independence. |
Author Bio
| Lisa Mitchell is Assistant Professor of Anthropology and History in the Department of South Asia Studies at the University of Pennsylvania. |
Reviews
"[O]riginal and persuasive . . . This lucid and engaging work will appeal to South Asianists as well as to other scholars interested in the history of language and literacy." —Mary Hancock, University of California, Santa Barbara, American Historical Review , Dec. 2009
"[M]akes a brilliant intervention in the study of language and modernity by critically interrogating the concept of the 'mother tongue' . . . brims with interesting and provocative ideas that extend beyond its immediate focus. . . .a fascinating and ambitious project." —Amanda Weidman, Bryn Mawr College, Anthropological Quarterly , Vol. 82, No. 4, 2009
"Written with great zest and clarity, this book deepens our understanding of the complex relationships among linguistic identity, state formation, and individual political participation in South India." —Martha Ann Selby, University of Texas
"An exceptionally provocative work, unparalleled and unprecedented, that will certainly exert a profound impact on many areas of scholarship—even, I believe, outside of the area of Indian studies. . . . A wide-ranging and exhilarating intellectual roller-coaster ride." —Phillip B. Wagoner, Wesleyan University
"There has been an explosion of recent studies of the regional cultures of South Asia built around its major modern languages. Lisa Mitchell's book is an outstanding addition to this fine list. The emergence of modern Telugu, its geographic imagination and its political aspirations, fulfilled at the cost of the self-sacrifice of martyrs, are brilliantly narrated and analyzed in this superb study. Mitchell's prose is crisp and precise, her reasoning is historically informed and theoretically sophisticated, and her ethnography is both sensitive and astute. This book is informative, thought-provoking and a pleasure to read." —Partha Chatterjee, Professor of Anthropology, Columbia University and Professor of Political Science, Centre for Studies in Social Sciences, Calcutta
"The study subtly identifies links that all too often appear lost in the haze of un-critical activism. For that reason, along with its readable and forceful prose, this book makes a lasting contribution to knowledge and offers a valuable addition to any reading list on modern South Asian history." —South Asia Research |
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Table of Contents
Acknowledgments Note on Transliteration and Spelling Introduction: A New Emotional Commitment to Language 1. From Language of the Land to Language of the People: Geography, Language, and Community in Southern India 2. Making a Subject of Language 3. Making the Local Foreign: Shared Language and History in Southern India 4. From Pandit to Primer: Pedagogy and Its Mediums 5. From the Art of Memory to the Art of Translation: Making Languages Parallel 6. Martyrs in the Name of Language? Death and the Making of Linguistic Passion Conclusion: Language as a New Foundational Category Notes Bibliography Index |
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