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ID154551
Title ProperFrom Gandhi to Gurus
Other Title Informationthe rise of the ‘guru-sphere’
LanguageENG
AuthorMehta, Mona G
Summary / Abstract (Note)This article compares the public sphere of gurus (‘guru-sphere’) in contemporary Gujarat and that of Gandhi historically as important sites of political contestation. It argues that despite their common use of religious idioms to convey political ideas, Gandhi and the gurus authorise radically different political projects with divergent conceptions of the Hindu subject and Indian polity. The discursive activities of the guru-sphere have helped forge a dominant consensus that endorses Hindutva politics. Operating within a democratic civil society and borrowing from Gandhian idioms, gurus have actively challenged key constitutional values derived from the Gandhian public sphere. The study reveals the paradoxical tendency of Gujarat's public sphere to produce hegemonic monologues over pluralistic dialogues, not in the absence of, but through the institutional mechanisms of, deliberative democracy.
`In' analytical NoteSouth Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies Vol. 40, No.3; Sep 2017: p.500-516
Journal SourceSouth Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies 2017-09 40, 3
Key WordsGujarat ;  Hindutva ;  Deliberative Democracy ;  Public Sphere ;  Consensus ;  Mohandas K. Gandhi ;  Civil Societ ;  Gurus ;  Guru-Sphere