ABSTRACT

Over the last four decades, Dipesh Chakrabarty’s astonishingly wide-ranging scholarship has elaborated a range of important issues, especially those of modernity, identity, and politics – in dialogue with postcolonial theory and critical historiography – on global and planetary scales. All of this makes Chakrabarty among the most significant (and most cited) scholars working in the humanities and social sciences today. The present text comprises substantive yet short, academic yet accessible essays that are crafted in conversation with the critical questions raised by Chakrabarty’s writings.

Now, Chakrabarty holds the singular distinction of making key contributions to some of the most salient shifts in understandings of the Global South that have come about in wake of subaltern studies and postcolonial perspectives, critiques of Eurocentrism together with elaborations of public pasts, and articulations of climatic histories alongside problems of the Anthropocene. Rather than exegeses and commentaries, these original, commissioned, pieces – written by a stellar cast of contributors from four continents – imaginatively engage Chakrabarty’s insights and arguments, in order to incisively explore important issues of the politics of knowledge in contemporary worlds.

This book will be of interest to scholars and graduate students interested in a wide variety of interdisciplinary issues across the humanities and social sciences, especially the interplay between postcolonial perspectives and subaltern studies, between man-made climate change and the human sciences, between history and theory, and between modernity and globalization.

chapter 1|15 pages

Engaging Dipesh Chakrabarty

An introduction

part I|27 pages

Affect and intellect

chapter 2|10 pages

Between critique and creativity

Some other politics of writing history in Aotearoa New Zealand

chapter 4|6 pages

The significance of Provincializing Europe

Memory, argument, and the life of the book

chapter 5|5 pages

Labour history and “Culture” critique

Reflections on an idea

part II|45 pages

Critical conversations

chapter 6|9 pages

Writing the void *

chapter 7|17 pages

Histories, dwelling, habitations

A cyber-conversation with Dipesh Chakrabarty

part III|57 pages

Global pasts and postcolonial differences

chapter 9|12 pages

Rights and coercion

Adivasi rights and coal mining in central India

chapter 10|17 pages

When victims become rulers

Partition, caste, and politics in West Bengal

chapter 11|18 pages

The Cold War era as a rule of experts

A view from India 1

chapter 12|8 pages

Historical wounds and the public life of history

The stolen generations narrative

part IV|50 pages

Historical disciplines and modern universals

chapter 13|12 pages

Memory, historiography, and trauma

The limits of representation

chapter 14|11 pages

Thinking Freedom with Gandhi

chapter 15|13 pages

Western thought as “Indispensable and Inadequate”

Dipesh Chakrabarty and the paradox of postcolonial historiography

chapter 16|12 pages

Translating the other

Lessons from the world of medieval Japan

part V|49 pages

The Anthropocene and other affiliations

chapter 18|8 pages

Art in the time of tricksters and monsters

Reflections on the Anthropocene

chapter 20|16 pages

Figures of immanence