The Politics of Indian Secularism
- 1 October 1992
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Modern Asian Studies
- Vol. 26 (4) , 815-853
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0026749x00010088
Abstract
Indian newspapers and academic journals assault their readers with stories of large-scale communal violence and of the communalization of India's political institutions. These stories are frequently accompanied by pious editorials which enact the well-known Indian ritual of paying lip-service to the concept of ‘secularism’. Secularism is one question on which intellectuals have made common cause with social workers and politicians, joining them in meetings and seminars, even participating in the peace marches which are commonly organized in the aftermath of communal riots. There have even been occasions in which individuals who are known to have been involved, directly or otherwise, in communal battles, have participated in these rites of secularism.Keywords
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