ABSTRACT

This book brings together essays on North East India from across disciplines to explore new understandings of the colonial and contemporary realities of the region. Departing from the usual focus on identity and politics, it offers fresh representations from history, social anthropology, culture, literature, politics, performance and gender.

Through the lens of modern practices, the essays in this volume engage with diverse issues, including state-making practices, knowledge production and its politics, history writing, colonialism, role of capital, institutions, changing locations of orality and modernity, production and reception of texts, performances and literatures, social change and memory, violence and gender relations, along with their wider historical, geographical and ideational mappings. In the process, they illustrate how the specificities of the region can become useful sites to interrogate global phenomena and processes — for instance, in what ways ideas and practices of modernity played an important role in framing the region and its people. Further, the volume underlines the complex ways in which the past came to be imagined, produced and contested in the region.

With its blend of inter-disciplinary approach, analytical models and perspectives, this book will be useful to scholars, researchers and general readers interested in North East India and those working on history, frontiers and borderlands, gender, cultural studies and literature.

chapter |20 pages

Introduction

Frames of region and people: practices of knowledge and representations

part I|96 pages

Region, frontier and state

chapter 1|33 pages

Region formed and imagined

Reconsidering temporal, spatial and social context of Kāmarūpa

chapter 2|33 pages

Conquest and the quotidian

Violence and the making of Tripura (1760–1793)

chapter 3|28 pages

The arteries of empire

Routes, people and mobility in colonial Naga Hills (1850s–1920s)

part II|105 pages

Knowledge, people and representation

chapter 4|25 pages

Vai phobia to Raj nostalgia

Sahibs, chiefs and commoners in colonial Lushai hills

chapter 5|28 pages

Text, knowledge and representation

Reading gender in Sumi marriage practices *

chapter 6|23 pages

Orality

Analysing its politics within the domains of the Mizo narrative

chapter 7|27 pages

Empire and the making of a narrative

The Ballad of the General and its history as a historical source in colonial Assam

part III|85 pages

Writing culture, writing politics

chapter 8|25 pages

Of people and their stories

Writings in English from India’s Northeast

chapter 9|25 pages

Close encounters of the real kind

The avatars of terror in two Assamese short stories

chapter 10|33 pages

Subdued Eloquence

Poetics of body movement, time and space