Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:1588Hits:19754835Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Article   Article
 

ID144172
Title ProperDelicious Delhi
Other Title Informationnostalgia, consumption and the old city
LanguageENG
AuthorGandhi, Ajay
Summary / Abstract (Note)This article examines how Old Delhi is represented and recreated in contemporary India. Delhi’s old city was once the locus of pre-colonial Mughal sovereignty. It is now often encountered via nationalist spectacles, mass-media images and consumption practices. Paralleling neo-liberalism’s onset in the 1990s, its street food, bazaar spaces and historical monuments have been avidly appropriated by reigning institutions and classes. Old Delhi suggests that which the new India has left behind; yet this displacement also elicits longing for what has been lost.
This medieval remnant can therefore be considered the site of nostalgia consumed by a globalised middle class. This article presents an ethnography of Old Delhi’s invocation in New Delhi’s cultural landscape, including malls, newspapers, heritage sites, hotels, and food courts. In triangulating among the realms of nationalist nostalgia, middle-class identity and mediated consumption, it emphasises how India’s neoliberal emergence is bound up with the co-opting of the past.
`In' analytical NoteIdentities: Global Studies in Culture and Power Vol. 23, No.3; Jun 2016: p.345-361
Journal SourceIdentities: Global Studies in Culture and Power 2016-06 23, 3
Key WordsIndia ;  Nostalgia ;  Heritage ;  Consumption ;  Delhi ;  Middle-Class