ABSTRACT

Bridging two generations of scholarship on social inequality and modern political forms, this book examines the political philosophies of inclusion of subalterns/Dalits in Gramsci and Ambedkar’s political philosophies. It highlights the full range of Gramsci’s ‘philosophy of praxis’ and presents a more critical appreciation of his thought in the study of South Asian societies. Equally, Ambedkar’s thought and philosophy is put to the forefront and acquires a prominence in the international context.

Overcoming geographical, cultural and disciplinary boundaries, the book gives relevance to the subalterns. Following the lead of Gramsci and Ambedkar, the contributors are committed, apart from underscoring the historical roots of subalternity, to uncovering the subalterns’ presence in social, economic, cultural, educational, literary, legal and religious grounds. The book offers a renewed critical approach to Gramsci and Ambedkar and expands on their findings in order to offer a present-day political focus into one of the most crucial themes of contemporary society.

This book is of interest to an interdisciplinary audience, including political theory, post-colonial studies, subaltern studies, comparative political philosophy, Dalit studies, cultural studies, South Asian studies and the study of religions.

chapter |32 pages

Subalterns and Dalits in Gramsci and Ambedkar

A prologue to a ‘posthumous' dialogue

part |39 pages

The emergence of subaltern/Dalit subjectivity and historical agency

chapter |16 pages

Revisiting interwar thought

Stigma, labor, and the immanence of caste-class

chapter |13 pages

The other prince

Ambedkar, constitutional democracy, and the agency of the law

part |28 pages

The function of intellectuals

chapter |12 pages

Notes on Q6§32

Gramsci and the Dalits

chapter |14 pages

Limits of the organic intellectual

A Gramscian reading of Ambedkar

part |41 pages

Subalternity and common sense

chapter |13 pages

Living subalternity

Antonio Gramsci's concept of common sense 1

chapter |13 pages

Race, class, and religion

Gramsci's conception of subalternity

chapter |13 pages

The Risorgimento and its discontents

Gramsci's reflections on conflict and control in the aftermath of Italy's unification

part |28 pages

Dalit literature, subalternity and consciousness

chapter |13 pages

Consciousness, agency and humiliation

Reflections on Dalit life-writing and subalternity

part |45 pages

The religion of the subalterns/Dalits

chapter |12 pages

Why does religion matter to politics?

Truth and ideology in a Gramscian approach

chapter |7 pages

Conclusion

Which itineraries for Dalits, subalterns and intellectuals?