A Hygienic City-Nation: Space, Community, and Everyday Life in Colonial Calcutta


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Calcutta, the centre of British imperial power in India, figures in scholarship as the locus of colonialism and the hotbed of anti-colonial nationalist movements. Yet, historians have largely ignored how the city shaped these movements. A Hygienic City-Nation is the first academic work that examines everyday urban formations in the colonial city that informed the broad global forces of imperialism, nationalism, and urbanism, and were, in turn, shaped by them. Drawing on previously unexplored archives of the Calcutta Improvement Trust and neighbourhood clubs, the author uncovers hidden stories of the city at the everyday level of neighbourhoods or paras, where kinship-like ties, caste, religion, and ethnicity constituted new urban modernity. Ghosh focuses on an emergent discourse on Hindu spatial hygiene that powered nationalist pedagogic efforts to train city dwellers in conduct fit for the city-nation. In such pedagogic efforts, upper-caste Bengalis were pitted against the lower-caste working poor and featured as ideal inhabitants of the city: the citizen.

Author: Nabaparna Ghosh
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Published: 10/29/2020
Pages: 236
Binding Type: Hardcover
Weight: 0.90lbs
Size: 9.20h x 7.70w x 0.70d
ISBN13: 9781108489898
ISBN10: 1108489893
BISAC Categories:
- History | Asia | South | General
- Social Science | Sociology | Urban