Indian Political Theory
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Table of Contents

Introduction: Time for a New Orientalism?

Part One: What Political Theory is Meant to Do

1. The Thick and Thin of Svaraj

2. Political Theory and Comparative Political Theory

3. What is Indian Political Theory?

Part Two: The Inadequacy of Trans-Atlantic Political Theory

4. Theories of "Our" Condition: Habermas and the Post-Secular Turn

5. Theories of "Our" Oppression: Žižek and the Critique of Human Rights

6. Theories of "Our" Liberation: Rawls, Sen, and the Romance of Global Justice

7. An Unkindness of Theories: Trans-Atlantic Marxism, Post-Structuralism,

and Post-Colonial Ethnographies

Part Three: Preconditions for Svaraj

8. Tradition, Hybridity, Equality

9. Gandhi and Ambedkar

10. Dalit Svaraj

About the Author

Aakash Singh Rathore is Visiting Professor at the Centre for Philosophy, Jawaharlal Nehru University, India and Director of the International Research Network for Religion and Democracy (www.irnrd.org). He is also an International Fellow of the Center for Ethics & Global Politics in Rome, Italy. His previous work includes Indian Political Thought: A Reader (co-edited with Silika Mohapatra, 2010), also published by Routledge.

Reviews

'Aakash Singh Rathore wrests the subject of political theory from the hands of self-centred and increasingly irrelevant Western thinkers and he democratizes it by anchoring it in the experience of the downtrodden masses of India: the Dalits. By re-reading Gandhi and Ambedkar, Professor Rathore rescues the concept of svaraj from Hindu nationalists and revives it to make it relevant to political theory - and to politics - today and in the future, in India and outside. This is a book of stunning ambition and great learning written in a style that is playful, confrontational and intellectually demanding. It should be read by all serious students of political theory, East and West.' Torkel Brekke, Peace Research Institute Oslo (PRIO) and the University of Oslo, Norway. 'In this fascinating work Aakash Singh Rathore explores the many dimensions of the concept of Swaraj within the broader context of Political Theory, Indian Political Theory specifically. Rigorous revaluation of the concept enables him to reassess the long-standing debate between universalism and particularism while negotiating creatively between western-centric theory and the indigeneity he champions. It is a priceless read.' Neera Chandhoke, Visiting Professorial Fellow, Centre for Law and Governance, Jawaharlal Nehru University, India.'Indian Political Theory is a welcome volume as it seeks to introduce the reader to the theoretical possibility that remains hidden in the system of ideas developed by thinkers like Babasaheb Ambedkar. In a fundamental sense the volume performs a moral function: it defines the completeness of Indian political theory on ethical grounds, with the demand of an egalitarian accommodation of subaltern thought.'Gopal Guru, Jawaharlal Nehru University, India'Indian Political Theory does much more than provide a perfect cognitive mapping of what its

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