ID | 152349 |
Title Proper | Paper, public works and politics |
Other Title Information | tracing archives of corruption in 1940s–1950s Uttar Pradesh, India |
Language | ENG |
Author | Gould, William |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | In moving away from older linear narratives around the costs and benefits of ‘corruption’ to development and democratic processes, social scientists have tended to downplay temporality in their work on the phenomenon in the global South. Historical research, however, offers a different kind of nuance around moments in which corruption becomes important in political and administrative discourse. Examining archives on corruption in detail and comparatively poses different questions about the operation of the everyday state. It also provides alternative means for exploring the nature of citizenship, national belonging in India and how the disempowered are often unevenly affected by corrupt acts. Using two case studies in the Public Works Department during state transition in the late 1940s and early 1950s, in India’s most populous state, Uttar Pradesh, this article examines how archives convey multiple and contingent meanings to early postcolonial discourses of ‘corruption’. Such archives present the phenomenon as a vehicle or symbolic resource for larger political processes over the period. This potentially challenges our perspective on some of the larger questions surrounding the early postcolonial state, the nature of civil/political society in that period for India, ideas of national belonging and the relationship between India and Pakistan. |
`In' analytical Note | Contemporary South Asia Vol. 25, No.1; Mar 2017: p.38-55 |
Journal Source | Contemporary South Asia Vol: 25 No 1 |
Key Words | India ; Administration ; Corruption ; Uttar Pradesh ; Public Works |