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ID147208
Title ProperRevolution and revelation, or, when is history too soon?
LanguageENG
AuthorMaclean, Kama
Summary / Abstract (Note)If historiography is ordered by a series of thematic and methodological turns, then it is not hard to demonstrate that there has in recent years been a turn towards revolutionary histories of South Asia. Scholars have begun to transcend the limitations of Gandhian frameworks in search of more dynamic understandings of Indian pasts that factor in the role of violence, subterfuge and conspiracy in South Asian anti-colonial struggles. But what happens when new methodologies and narratives begin to destabilise or even invert longstanding historical readings that have been the basis for generations of academic knowledge of the past? When, and under what political and institutional conditions, are fresh interpretations of history sayable? Can historical trajectories or interpretations be quickly turned or must they evolve slowly? This paper is a self-reflexive critique of the ways in which radical histories can—or cannot—be written in the post-colonial moment, with reference to the compulsions brought to bear in the writing of revolutionary history. This article considers these historiographical issues alongside compelling evidence of the involvement of Jawaharlal and Motilal Nehru in key aspects of the revolutionary actions of the Hindustan Socialist Republican Association.
`In' analytical NoteSouth Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies Vol. 39, No.3; Sep 2016: p.678-694
Journal SourceSouth Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies 2016-09 39, 3
Key WordsViolence ;  Historiography ;  Jawaharlal Nehru ;  Censorship ;  Gandhi ;  Revolutionary ;  Motilal Nehru ;  Bhagat Sing ;  Hindustan Socialist Republican Association