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Colonizing Kashmir

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The Indian government, touted as the world's largest democracy, often repeats that Jammu and Kashmir—its only Muslim-majority state—is "an integral part of India." The region, which is disputed bet...
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  • 25 July 2023
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The Indian government, touted as the world's largest democracy, often repeats that Jammu and Kashmir—its only Muslim-majority state—is "an integral part of India." The region, which is disputed between India and Pakistan, and is considered the world's most militarized zone, has been occupied by India for over seventy-five years. In this book, Hafsa Kanjwal interrogates how Kashmir was made "integral" to India through a study of the decade long rule (1953-1963) of Bakshi Ghulam Mohammad, the second Prime Minister of the State of Jammu and Kashmir. Drawing upon a wide array of bureaucratic documents, propaganda materials, memoirs, literary sources, and oral interviews in English, Urdu, and Kashmiri, Kanjwal examines the intentions, tensions, and unintended consequences of Bakshi's state-building policies in the context of India's colonial occupation. She reveals how the Kashmir government tailored its policies to integrate Kashmir's Muslims while also showing how these policies were marked by inter-religious tension, corruption, and political repression.

  Challenging the binaries of colonial and postcolonial, Kanjwal historicizes India's occupation of Kashmir through processes of emotional integration, development, normalization, and empowerment to highlight the new hierarchies of power and domination that emerged in the aftermath of decolonization. In doing so, she urges us to question triumphalist narratives of India's state-formation, as well as the sovereignty claims of the modern nation-state.

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Price: $32.00
Pages: 384
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Imprint: Stanford University Press
Series: South Asia in Motion
Publication Date: 25 July 2023
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781503636033
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

"Colonizing Kashmir offers a brilliant rethinking of how sovereignty and secularism work to obscure the colonizing projects of postcolonial states. For India, Kanjwal argues, the colonial occupation of Kashmir is not an aberration nor a residual of the past, rather pivotal to the formation of the newly independent state. Scholars of religion, settler colonialism, secularism, and anyone interested in the varied and unexpected modalities through which territorial control functions will gain tremendously from the sharp conceptual interventions in this meticulously researched book." —Jasbir K Puar, Rutgers University
Hafsa Kanjwal is Assistant Professor of History at Lafayette College.
Introduction
1. Genealogies of Colonial Occupation and State-Building: Becoming Khalid-i-Kashmir
2. Narrating Normalization: Media, Propaganda, and Foreign Policy amid Cold War Politics
3. Producing and Promoting Paradise: Tourism, Cinema, and the Desire for Kashmir
4. Developing Dependency: Economic Planning, Financial Integration, and Corruption
5. Shaping Subjectivities: Education, Secularism, and Its Discontents
6. Jashn-e-Kashmir: Patronage and the Institutionalization of Kashmiri Culture
7. The State of Emergency: State Repression, Political Dissent, and the Struggle for Self-Determination
Conclusion