ABSTRACT

The blood-laden birth-pangs of the Indian "nation-state" undoubtedly had a bearing on the contentious issue of group rights for cultural minorities. Indeed, the trajectory of the concept ‘minority rights’ evolved amidst multiple conceptualizations, political posturing and violent mobilizations and outbursts. Accommodating minority groups posed a predicament for the fledgling "nation-state" of post-colonial India.

This book compares and contrasts Muslim and Sikh communities in pre- and post-Partition India. Mapping the evolving discourse on minority rights, the author looks at the overlaps between the Constitutional and the majoritarian discourse being articulated in the public sphere and poses questions about the guaranteeing of minority rights. The book suggests that through historical ruptures and breaks , communities oscillate between being minorities and nations. Combining archival material with ethnographic fieldwork, it studies the identity groups and their vexed relationship to the ideas of nation and nationalism. It captures meanings attributed to otherwise politically loaded concepts such as nation, nation-state and minority rights in the everyday world of Muslims and Sikhs and thus tries to make sense of the patterns of accommodation, adaptation and contestation in the life-world.

Successfully confronting and illuminating the challenge of reconciling representation and equality both for groups and within groups, this exploration of South Asian nationalisms and communal relations will be of interest to academics in the field of South Asian Studies, in particular Sociology and Politics.

chapter |27 pages

Introduction

The ‘nation-state' and its citizens

chapter |25 pages

Nationalism, minority rights and the public sphere

The terms of an emerging discourse *

chapter |44 pages

Qaum, millat and ummah

Liminality in the Muslim identity discourse

chapter |53 pages

Beyond hybridity

Evolution of a Sikh exclusive identity; from panth to qaum

chapter |19 pages

Muslim perceptions

Nation, identity and rights *

chapter |19 pages

Sikh narratives

Nationhood and its discontents

chapter |10 pages

Concluding remarks

Comparative perspectives on Muslim and Sikh identities