In his essay, Arjun Appadurai reflects on the significance of Gandhi s ideas on nonviolence as a form of political action in India, pursuing the thesis that Gandhi s thought and practices exhibit a double genealogy. While one genealogy is related to Indian notions of asceticism, avoidance, and...
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In his essay, Arjun Appadurai reflects on the significance of Gandhi s ideas on nonviolence as a form of political action in India, pursuing the thesis that Gandhi s thought and practices exhibit a double genealogy. While one genealogy is related to Indian notions of asceticism, avoidance, and abstinence, the second is influenced by kingship, sacrifice, and martial prowess and has no regard for the injury of living beings. According to Indian traditions of warrior asceticism, both genealogies intermingle, which constitutes a vital resource for a politics of militant religiousness in India today. Nalini Malani has chosen this essay in order to respond to it with drawings that sometimes overlay the text, sometimes accompany it, sensually reflecting Appadurai's elaborations.
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