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Forms of collective violence [2nd ed.] : riots, pogroms, and genocide in modern India

By: Language: English Publication details: Three Essays Collective 2005 GurgaonEdition: 2nd edDescription: xvi, 181pISBN:
  • 9788188789412
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 303.60954 B736f2
Summary: These essays focus on the various forms of collective violence that have occurred in India during the past six decades, which include riots, pogroms, and genocide. It is argued that these various forms of violence must be understood not as spontaneous outbreaks of passion, but as productions by organized groups. Moreover, it is also evident that government and its agents do not always act to control violence, but often engage in or permit gratuitous acts of violence against particular groups under the cover of the imperative of restoring order, peace, and tranquility. This has certainly been the case in numerous incidents of collective violence in India where curfew restrictions have been used for just such purposes. In this context, secularism constitutes a countervailing practice, and a set of values that are essential to maintain balance in a plural society where the organization of intergroup violence is endemic, persistent, and deadly.
List(s) this item appears in: New arrival August 22 to 28, 2022
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Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Books Books PK Kelkar Library, IIT Kanpur General Stacks 303.60954 B736f2 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available A185899
Total holds: 0

These essays focus on the various forms of collective violence that have occurred in India during the past six decades, which include riots, pogroms, and genocide. It is argued that these various forms of violence must be understood not as spontaneous outbreaks of passion, but as productions by organized groups. Moreover, it is also evident that government and its agents do not always act to control violence, but often engage in or permit gratuitous acts of violence against particular groups under the cover of the imperative of restoring order, peace, and tranquility. This has certainly been the case in numerous incidents of collective violence in India where curfew restrictions have been used for just such purposes. In this context, secularism constitutes a countervailing practice, and a set of values that are essential to maintain balance in a plural society where the organization of intergroup violence is endemic, persistent, and deadly.

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