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Violent Memories: South Asian Spaces of Postcolonial Anamnesis

Legg, Stephen

Authors



Contributors

Peter Meusburger
Editor

Michael Heffernan
Editor

Edgar Wunder
Editor

Abstract

The ambiguous phrase “violent memories” strikes at two of the key conceptual matters about which scholars of India have theorized: memories of violent acts and the violence that such recollections can do to those who remember them, those who are remembered, and those who are forgotten. The author seeks to provide an overview of the memory politics that has accompanied India’s struggle for freedom from colonialism, both during the Raj and since independence. The main events and processes that scholars of postcolonial and subaltern studies have investigated in India are reviewed, including anticolonial violence and nonviolence, the memory politics of the “Mutiny” of 1857, gendered and sexed politics and violence, the partition of 1947, communal riots, Indira Gandhi’s “Emergency,” and natural disasters. The author positions these reviews within relatively broad theoretical trends in postcolonial studies from which they have drawn and to which they have a great deal to contribute.

Citation

Legg, S. (2011). Violent Memories: South Asian Spaces of Postcolonial Anamnesis. In P. Meusburger, M. Heffernan, & E. Wunder (Eds.), Cultural Memories: The Geographical Point of View (287-303). Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-90-481-8945-8_16

Online Publication Date Jan 1, 2011
Publication Date Apr 15, 2011
Deposit Date Apr 17, 2023
Publisher Springer
Pages 287-303
Series Title Knowledge and Space
Series Number 4
Book Title Cultural Memories: The Geographical Point of View
ISBN 978-90-481-8944-1
DOI https://doi.org/10.1007/978-90-481-8945-8_16
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/19466044
Publisher URL https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-90-481-8945-8_16