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ID147203
Title ProperCommonplace anti-colonialism
Other Title InformationBhagat Singh's jail notebook and the politics of reading
LanguageENG
AuthorElam, J Daniel
Summary / Abstract (Note)Bhagat Singh (1907–31) is popularly celebrated as one of the major leaders of the Indian anti-colonial movement. Scholars have pointed to his writings to demonstrate his philosophical mastery. One of the primary texts used to support this claim is the activist's jail notebook, a collection of reading notes Bhagat Singh produced while in jail. The existence of the jail notebook, however, has only been used as proof of Bhagat Singh's mastery, rather than as possibly articulating its own philosophy for anti-colonial revolution. This essay analyses Bhagat Singh's jail notebook in order to offer a theory of ‘commonplace anti-colonialism’ and inconsequence. Rather than use the jail notebook to corroborate Bhagat Singh's ‘mastery’ as an anti-colonial revolutionary thinker, this essay argues that the jail notebook reveals a more radical revolutionary politics: of reading. Bhagat Singh's reading practices, especially in the face of death, suggest a new way to theorise ‘revolution’ as the perpetual deferment of authority and mastery, rather than the eventual assumption of those positions. Consequently, ‘inconsequential reading’ may, in turn, reveal a more radically egalitarian politics of revolution than previously ascribed to Bhagat Singh.
`In' analytical NoteSouth Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies Vol. 39, No.3; Sep 2016: p.592-607
Journal SourceSouth Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies 2016-09 39, 3
Key WordsRevolution ;  Bhagat Singh ;  Anti-Colonialism ;  Inconsequence ;  Reading