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Language and the Making of Modern India
Nationalism and the Vernacular in Colonial Odisha, 1803–1956
Explores the ways linguistic nationalism has enabled and deepened the reach of All-India nationalism. This title is also available as Open Access.
Pritipuspa Mishra (Author)
9781108443319, Cambridge University Press
Paperback / softback, published 27 October 2022
259 pages, 7 maps
22.9 x 15.2 x 1.4 cm, 0.391 kg
'Language and the Making of Modern India will be valuable to scholars of Indian vernacular politics, regionalism, nationalism, and citizenship. Mishra's is a pioneering study that shows how regional linguistic politics are crucial to understanding the history of citizenship in modern India, and how language became the crucial grounds for the constitution of the Indian national subject.' Farina Mir, University of Michigan
Through an examination of the creation of the first linguistically organized province in India, Odisha, Pritipuspa Mishra explores the ways regional languages came to serve as the most acceptable registers of difference in post-colonial India. She argues that rather than disrupting the rise and spread of All-India nationalism, regional linguistic nationalism enabled and deepened the reach of nationalism in provincial India. Yet this positive narrative of the resolution of Indian multilingualism ignores the cost of linguistic division. Examining the case of the Adivasis of Odisha, Mishra shows how regional languages in India have come to occupy a curiously hegemonic position. Her study pushes us to rethink our understanding of the vernacular in India as a powerless medium and acknowledges the institutional power of language, contributing to global debates about linguistic justice and the governance of multilingualism. This title is also available as Open Access.
Introduction: nation in the vernacular
1. How the vernacular became regional
2. Vernacular publics: a modern Odia readership imagined
3. The Odia political subject and the rise of the Odia movement
4. Odisha as vernacular homeland
5. The invisible minority: history and the problem of the Adivasi
6. The genius of India: linguistic difference, regionalism and the Indian nation
Postscript.
Subject Areas: Colonialism & imperialism [HBTQ], Social & cultural history [HBTB], Asian history [HBJF]