Contesting power : resistance and everyday social relations in South Asia

Bibliographic Information

Contesting power : resistance and everyday social relations in South Asia

edited by Douglas Haynes and Gyan Prakash

Oxford University Press, 1991

Search this Book/Journal
Note

Essays emerged from two panels on "Modes of protest in South Asia", organized by the co-editors at the annual conference on South Asia at the University of Wisconsin and at the meetings of the American Historical Association

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Historians, sociologists and political scientists have long been interested in riots, rebellions and revolutions. More recently, however, they have focused attention upon quieter, less dramatic confrontations between oppressors and the oppressed. They have pointed out that resistance can occur in "everday" forms. The specific shapes of everyday resistance are both determined by, and an aspect of, various socio-economic and cultural practices. The present volume explores and analyzes instances of everyday resistance in South Asian history and society. The eight essays cover groups from peasants to urban labourers, and from women to merchants. Several of the essays use unconventional sources and methods to supplement archival research while depicting the processes of the sorts of non-confrontational behaviour which contest existing structures of power. Seen as a whole, the volume suggests that the notion of resistance can be rethought and extended to take in and understand large areas of social activity.

by "Nielsen BookData"

Details
Page Top