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MARTELLI, JEAN-THOMAS (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   160687


From one participant cohort to another: surveying inter-generational political incubation in an Indian University / Martelli, Jean-Thomas; Arı, Barıs   Journal Article
Martelli, Jean-Thomas Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Several recent studies propose that political choices of Indian youth can hardly be distinguished from those of their parents in many respects. Contrary to this well-established understanding, this article shows that when set apart from the spheres of family and work, students in a flagship Indian university—mostly in the social sciences and humanities—gradually transform their political attitudes in light of prolonged exposure to a campus environment. Through combining ethnographic study with the analysis of a survey of political attitudes of Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) students, we show that time spent in situ fosters participation to political activities, increases chances of joining a student organization and make students more likely to identify themselves as politically radical. The class and caste background of students, on the other hand, are not strongly associated with political attitudes, showing the integrative nature of politicization on the JNU campus.
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2
ID:   181125


Politics of Our Selves: Left self-fashioning and the production of representative claims in everyday Indian campus politics / Martelli, Jean-Thomas   Journal Article
Martelli, Jean-Thomas Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Through engaging with everyday practices among student activists in contemporary Indian campus politics, this ethnographic study examines the breadcrumb trail between the left and self-fashioning. It focuses on a performative modality of political representation in Indian democracy by tracing the formation of biographical reconfigurations that implement subject-oriented techniques. The article charts their relevance in producing political legitimacy. It engages with the way in which personal reconfigurations are mobilized to recruit and appeal to both subaltern and privileged communities, thus generating universalistic representative claims and political efficacy.
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