ABSTRACT

This book explores the idea, psychology and political geography of Northeast India as forged by two interrelated but autonomous meta-narratives. First, the politics of conflict inherent in, and therefore predetermined by physical geography, and second, the larger geopolitics that was unfolding during the colonial period. Unravelling the history behind the turmoil engulfing Northeast India, the study contends that certain geographies — most pertinently fertile river valleys and surrounding mountains which feed the rivers — are integral to nature and any effort to disrupt this cohesion will result in conflict. It comprehensively traces the geopolitics of the region since colonial era — in particular the Great Game; the politics that went into the making of the McMahon Line, the Radcliffe Line and the Pemberton Line; the region’s relations with its international neighbours (China, Bhutan, Myanmar, Bangladesh and Nepal); as well as the issue of many formerly non-state-bearing populations awakening to the reality of the modern state.

Lucid and analytical, this book will be of great interest to scholars and researchers of Northeast India, modern Indian history, international relations, defence and strategic studies, and political science.

chapter |7 pages

Introduction

chapter |23 pages

Geography of Conflict in the Northeast

Rivers, valleys, mountains as integral regions

chapter |36 pages

History of Militarisation of the Northeast

Search for a liberal response to radical civil unrests

chapter |41 pages

Eastern Frontier of Northeast India

State and non-State

chapter |27 pages

Inner Line as Outer Line I

Making of the McMahon Line

chapter |24 pages

Inner Line as Outer Line II

The Empire and its colony

chapter |36 pages

Linguistic Nationalism Versus Religious Nationalism

Partition trauma and the Northeast

chapter |16 pages

Conclusion

In the end is the beginning