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MAOIST POLITICS (3) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   145014


Maoism in India and Nepal / Bhushan, Ranjit 2016  Book
Bhushan, Ranjit Book
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Publication New Delhi, Routledge, 2016.
Description vii, 251p.hbk
Standard Number 9781138639898
Key Words India  Nepal  Maoism  Maoist  Naxalbari Movement  Charu Mazumdar 
CPM  Left Extremist Movements  Maoist Politics 
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Copies: C:1/I:0,R:0,Q:0
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Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
058655335.43455405496/BHU 058655MainOn ShelfGeneral 
2
ID:   158421


Utopias of youth: politics of class in Maoist post-revolutionary mobilisation / Hirslund, Dan V   Journal Article
Hirslund, Dan V Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract This article investigates the changing role of youth in Nepali Maoism following their transformation from a guerrilla army to a parliamentary party after 2006. Drawing on 1 year of ethnographic fieldwork, I trace how the category of youth gained renewed relevance after the war and allowed the Maoist movement to sidestep complicated issues of class in the urban fabric. Building on a Gramscian framework of subaltern politics and Harvey’s ‘dialectical utopianism’, I argue that youth in the post-revolutionary context have become aligned with the political project of building ‘New Nepal’ and that this allows youth, as both a category and a subject position, to emerge as tools for utopian communist politics. Through an analysis of a divided class landscape in Kathmandu, the article documents the new and difficult alignments between Maoist ideals and positions of youth in the city with lasting outcomes for the party’s revolutionary project.
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3
ID:   160097


Utopias of youth: politics of class in Maoist post-revolutionary mobilisation / Hirslund, Dan V   Journal Article
Hirslund, Dan V Journal Article
0 Rating(s) & 0 Review(s)
Summary/Abstract This article investigates the changing role of youth in Nepali Maoism following their transformation from a guerrilla army to a parliamentary party after 2006. Drawing on 1 year of ethnographic fieldwork, I trace how the category of youth gained renewed relevance after the war and allowed the Maoist movement to sidestep complicated issues of class in the urban fabric. Building on a Gramscian framework of subaltern politics and Harvey’s ‘dialectical utopianism’, I argue that youth in the post-revolutionary context have become aligned with the political project of building ‘New Nepal’ and that this allows youth, as both a category and a subject position, to emerge as tools for utopian communist politics. Through an analysis of a divided class landscape in Kathmandu, the article documents the new and difficult alignments between Maoist ideals and positions of youth in the city with lasting outcomes for the party’s revolutionary project.
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