ID | 164047 |
Title Proper | Genealogy of a partition city |
Other Title Information | war, migration and urban space in Delhi |
Language | ENG |
Author | Datta, Anjali Bhardwaj |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | This paper makes interventions in our understanding of the histories of Partition. Rather than treating 1947 as a moment of temporal rupture, it argues that processes that were set in motion during the two World Wars persisted into the post-colonial period and proved critical in determining the shape of contemporary Indian urbanism. While the post-Partition Indian state, obsessed with planning capital spaces, used rehabilitation as an instrument to gain control over the city, this paper argues that it was during the early 1940s, and particularly during World War II, that we can trace the genealogy of post-colonial urban governance. It will assess migration, urban planning, popular protest, war-time controls, and the political economy of land use during the 1940s in Delhi, which in many ways shaped how the city later responded to Partition. |
`In' analytical Note | South Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies Vol. 42, No.1; Feb 2019: p.152-169 |
Journal Source | South Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies 2019-03 42, 1 |
Key Words | Migration ; Refugees ; Partition ; urban ; World War II |