India After Gandhi: The History of the World's Largest Democracy

Front Cover
Pan Macmillan, Feb 10, 2011 - History - 300 pages

Born against a background of privation and civil war, divided along lines of caste, class, language and religion, independent India emerged, somehow, as a united and democratic country. Ramachandra Guha’s hugely acclaimed book tells the full story – the pain and the struggle, the humiliations and the glories – of the world’s largest and least likely democracy.

While India is sometimes the most exasperating country in the world, it is also the most interesting. Ramachandra Guha writes compellingly of the myriad protests and conflicts that have peppered the history of free India. Moving between history and biography, the story of modern India is peopled with extraordinary characters. Guha gives fresh insights into the lives and public careers of those long-serving Prime Ministers, Jawaharlal Nehru and Indira Gandhi. But the book also writes with feeling and sensitivity about lesser-known (though not necessarily less important) Indians – peasants, tribals, women, workers and musicians.

Massively researched and elegantly written, India After Gandhi is a remarkable account of India’s rebirth, and a work already hailed as a masterpiece of single volume history. This tenth anniversary edition, published to coincide with seventy years of India’s independence, is revised and expanded to bring the narrative up to the present.

 

Contents

Preface to the Second Edition
Unnatural Nation
PART ONE PICKING UP THE PIECES
xiii
Freedom and Parricide
xiv
The Logic of Division
ii
Apples in the Basket
ii
A Valley Bloody and Beautiful
ix
Refugees and the Republic
xxvii
PART FOUR THE RISE OF POPULISM
vii
War and Succession
vii
Leftward Turns
x
The Elixir of Victory
xv
The Rivals
xxxii
Autumn of the Matriarch
xix
Life Without the Congress
vii
Democracy in Disarray
vii

Ideas of India
xii
PART TWO NEHRUS INDIA
xvi
The Biggest Gamble in History
xvii
Home and the World
xvi
Redrawing the
iii
The Conquest of Nature
xiii
The Law and the Prophets
xxxii
Securing Kashmir
xliv
Tribal Trouble
xiii
PART THREE SHAKING THE CENTRE
cii
The Southern Challenge
ciii
The Experience of Defeat
xii
Peace in Our Time
xx
Minding the Minorities
xvi
This Son also Rises
i
PART FIVE A HISTORY OF EVENTS
xvi
Rights and Riots
xvii
A Multipolar Polity
iii
Rulers and Riches
i
Progress and its Discontents
i
The Rise of the BJP Systems
xix
A 5050 Democracy
xvi
Acknowledgements
xi
Notes
xii
Index
2023
List of Illustrations
RWC-65
Copyright

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About the author (2011)

Ramachandra Guha has taught at Yale, Stanford, Oslo, and the Indian Institute of Science. His other books include A Corner of a Foreign Field and Environmentalism: A Global History. His awards include the UK Cricket Society’s Literary Award and the Leopold-Hidy Prize of the American Society of Environmental History. In May 2008, Prospect and Foreign Policy magazines nominated Guha as one of the world’s one hundred most influential intellectuals. In 2009, he was awarded the Padma Bhushan for services to literature and education.

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