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ID107956
Title ProperMuslim modernism and trans-regional consciousness in Bengal, 1911-1925
Other Title Informationthe wide world of Samyabadi
LanguageENG
AuthorBose, Neilesh
Publication2011.
Summary / Abstract (Note)Histories of Marxism in South Asia often focus on the great men of colonial Indian politics, such as M. N. Roy, who imagined political futures away from nation or identity, or narrowly on activists like Muzaffar Ahmad, the founder of the Communist Party of India, without consideration of the regional-historical and intellectual contexts out of which such activism and imaginations sprang. Using the Bengali Muslim context of the early twentieth century, this article examines how Muslim activists imagined their identity outside of and beyond normative frameworks such as nation or religious community. This article specifically analyses Samyabadi, a left-oriented journal published in Calcutta from 1922 to 1925, in the larger context of communist developments in Bengal and throughout India. The findings offer exciting support for new research approaches to regional and religious identity in late colonial South Asia.
`In' analytical NoteSouth Asia Research Vol. 31, No. 3; Nov 2011: p.231-248
Journal SourceSouth Asia Research Vol. 31, No. 3; Nov 2011: p.231-248
Key WordsBengal Communist Party of India ;  History ;  Identity ;  India ;  Islam in South Asia ;  Marxism ;  Muslims ;  Muzaffar Ahmad ;  Nazrul Islam ;  Political Islam ;  Press ;  Samyabadi