Strangeness of Tamil Nadu: Contemporary history and political culture in South India

By: M S S PandianContributor(s): PANDIAN (M S S) | LUDDEN (David) Ed | ANANDHI (S) EdMaterial type: TextTextLanguage: English Publisher: Raniket Permanent Black 2022Description: xiv,250p. PB 22x14cmISBN: 9788178245492Subject(s): Identity and Language | Party Politics | Caste | Eelam Hope and DespairDDC classification: 954.82 Summary: M.S.S. Pandian (1958–2014) was an eminent historian of South Indian politics, caste, culture, and cinema. His writings offer distinctively Tamil insights on these areas. In this book his chief focus is Tamil political culture for roughly thirty years since 1985. His success lies in bringing a historical understanding to bear on what he called “the strangeness of Tamil Nadu”. a key figure in pandian’s thinking was e.V. Ramasamy “Periyar”. pandian argues that periyar’s ideals and strategies long remained popular among Tamil progressives, but that their survival became difficult because of radical changes in pan-indian political culture. To show these changes, this book is organised chronologically as well as along thematic sections that reflect the themes of periyar’s Dravidian ideology: linguistic identity, state politics, religion, and caste. Periyar’s ideas, pandian argues, can still provide productive standards for critical analysis of politics in India. But because they are not widely known or appreciated outside Tamil Nadu, they represent the “strangeness” of Tamil politics instead of being adapted as progressive in the country as a whole.
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Book Book St Aloysius College (Autonomous)
History 954.82 PANS (Browse shelf) Available 076154
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M.S.S. Pandian (1958–2014) was an eminent historian of South Indian politics, caste, culture, and cinema. His writings offer distinctively Tamil insights on these areas. In this book his chief focus is Tamil political culture for roughly thirty years since 1985. His success lies in bringing a historical understanding to bear on what he called “the strangeness of Tamil Nadu”. a key figure in pandian’s thinking was e.V. Ramasamy “Periyar”. pandian argues that periyar’s ideals and strategies long remained popular among Tamil progressives, but that their survival became difficult because of radical changes in pan-indian political culture. To show these changes, this book is organised chronologically as well as along thematic sections that reflect the themes of periyar’s Dravidian ideology: linguistic identity, state politics, religion, and caste. Periyar’s ideas, pandian argues, can still provide productive standards for critical analysis of politics in India. But because they are not widely known or appreciated outside Tamil Nadu, they represent the “strangeness” of Tamil politics instead of being adapted as progressive in the country as a whole.

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