ABSTRACT

This book presents a sociological interpretation of the emergence of modernity in India via the colonial encounter, and its ramifications for Indian society, economy, and polity. It outlines the main features of modernity and the Western context in which it was defined, both in classical and later sociological works, as well as the Western roots of India’s development project after independence. The Eurocentric origins of modernity in India are summarised, along with the challenges it has posed in the political realm in the building of a pan-Indian or national consciousness, and in the emergence of dominant caste politics and regional and regionalistic parties to counter what was perceived to be an elite and marginalising project to modernise the Indian nation. It describes the trajectory that the Indian economy has undertaken from state-supported capitalism at the time of independence to market-centric neoliberalism by the 1990s, and the effects of this trajectory on both rural and urban India. The dominating role of both the ‘old’ and the ‘new’ middle classes as formidable cultural forces and the heterogeneous character of the latter, as a result of the upward mobility that has been underway since independence, are also summarised, as are the debates around the ever-imminent breakup of the Indian family and its implications for women and the elderly. It ends by outlining the history and persistence of various economic and cultural forms of social exclusion in contemporary India. This book would be useful for students, researchers, and teachers of sociology, history, political science, and interdisciplinary courses in the social sciences, such as modern Indian studies.

chapter 1|23 pages

Understanding modernity

An outline of the main sociological perspectives

chapter 2|23 pages

The colonial encounter in India

Towards a complex modernity

chapter 3|23 pages

Conceptualizing development

The early modernisation model

chapter 4|23 pages

India after independence

Community, identity, and nation

chapter 5|23 pages

From village factions to regional parties

The democratising of caste in the field of electoral politics

chapter 6|25 pages

Village India

From colonial idea to capitalist takeover

chapter 7|23 pages

Public sector, LPG, and workers' struggles

An outline of the impact of state-driven capitalism on the working class

chapter 8|21 pages

The middle class in India

Its colonial, post-independent, and contemporary forms

chapter 9|24 pages

The family and the household

Changing social dynamics

chapter 10|23 pages

The economic and cultural dimensions of social exclusion in India

Definitions, history, and contemporary practices