ABSTRACT

This book critically examines the relationship between civility, citizenship and democracy. It engages with the oft-neglected idea of civility (as a Western concept) to explore the paradox of high democracy and low civility that plagues India. This concept helps analyse why democratic consolidation translates into limited justice and minimal equality, along with increased exclusion and performative violence against marginal groups in India.

The volume brings together key themes such as minority citizens and the incivility of caste, civility and urbanity, the struggles for ‘dignity’ and equality pursued by subaltern groups along with feminism and queer politics, and the exclusionary politics of the Citizenship Amendment Act, to argue that civility provides crucial insights into the functioning and social life of a democracy. In doing so, the book illustrates how a successful democracy may also harbour illiberal values and normalised violence and civil societies may have uncivil tendencies.

Enriched with case studies from various states in India, this book will be of interest to scholars and researchers of political science, political philosophy, South Asian studies, minority and exclusion studies, political sociology and social anthropology.

chapter |12 pages

The Indian paradox

High democracy and low civility

chapter 1|22 pages

Rural civilities

Caste, gender, and public life in Kerala

chapter 2|19 pages

The Christian conundrum

Minority citizens and the incivility of caste

chapter 3|19 pages

Disjunctions of democracy and liberalism

Agonistic imaginations of dignity in Bihar

chapter 4|20 pages

To be a Hindu citizen

Politics of Dalit migrants in contemporary West Bengal

chapter 5|22 pages

Modernity without alterity

Caste associations and Hindu cosmopolitanism in contemporary Mumbai

chapter 6|14 pages

Towards greater civility

Public morality and transversal queer/feminist politics in India

chapter 8|20 pages

An uncivil city *

chapter |4 pages

Afterword *