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ID140460
Title ProperAmbedkar, Marx and the Buddhist question
LanguageENG
AuthorSkaria, Ajay
Summary / Abstract (Note)This essay tries to frame one question, which at its most abbreviated can be posed thus: why does Ambedkar convert to Buddhism? Given Ambedkar's militant secularism, to ask this question is also to ask: what assumption of responsibility does that conversion enable which exceeds secular responsibility? This essay tracks how Ambedkar's religion questions both the liberal concept of minority, and the dissolution of the minor that is staged in Marx's critique simultaneously of religion and secularism. Buddhism becomes in the process a religion of the minor.
`In' analytical NoteSouth Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies Vol. 38, No.3; Sep 2015: p.450-465
Journal SourceSouth Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies Vol: 38 No 3
Key WordsCivil Society ;  Secularism ;  Conversion ;  Marx ;  Political Society ;  Civil Religion ;  Arendt ;  Ambedkar ;  Principle ;  Navayana Buddhism