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VAJPEYI, ANANYA (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   119746


Hindi, hinglish: head to head / Vajpeyi, Ananya   Journal Article
Vajpeyi, Ananya Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Summary/Abstract New Delhi-India has 1.2 billion people speaking the 15 official languages printed on every currency note. There's just no room on the Indian rupee for the hundreds of other languages and dialects spoken across the country. For a traveler, India can feel like Babel itself. Yet, most Indians manage to communicate with one another. The country won its independence from British rule in August 1947, and until the mid-1960s, it seemed as though the centrifugal force of linguistic difference, which also flagged cultural difference, would balkanize the new republic. But since the partition of Pakistan over six decades ago, India has hung together. If sometimes it seems precariously close to disintegration-thanks to internal religious or political conflict-then it is no longer because Indians expect their separate languages to count as the bases for distinct nationalities, as they did in the early phase of decolonization.
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2
ID:   149571


Return of Sanskrit: how an old language got caught up in India’s new culture wars / Vajpeyi, Ananya   Journal Article
Vajpeyi, Ananya Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Indian scholar Ananya Vajpeyi examines the way the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party is using Sanskrit to advance a Hindu supremacist agenda. She argues that academics need to step out of the ivory tower and resist the government’s manipulation of this ancient language.
Key Words India  Return of Sanskrit  Old Language  New Culture Wars 
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