This book explores a range of connections between India and Australia that fall outside the formal diplomacy of the two states. It examines how race, class and gender shape conceptions of the two nations, whose voices are heard and whose are not, and the politics that emerge from sport, culture, the drive for development as well as from language and the poetic. The book seeks to challenge the primacy of the state in determining the character of the nation and its monopoly of relations with other peoples. To this end, it looks to everyday life to find linkages not only between India and Australia but also extending through the South and Southeast Asian regions.
This book was published as a special issue of Postcolonial Studies.
Edited by:
Philip Darby (University of Melbourne Australia)
Imprint: Routledge
Country of Publication: United Kingdom
Dimensions:
Height: 246mm,
Width: 174mm,
Weight: 430g
ISBN: 9781138184831
ISBN 10: 1138184837
Pages: 144
Publication Date: 26 July 2016
Audience:
College/higher education
,
College/higher education
,
Further / Higher Education
,
A / AS level
Format: Hardback
Publisher's Status: Active
1.""Decentering the State: Perspectives from the encounter between India and Australia"". 2.""International Relations as Variations on everyday human relations"". 3. ""Examinations Access, and Inequity within the Empire: Britain, Australia and India, 1890-1910"". 4. ""Two Places and Three Times: Fragments retrieved of India and Australia in the 1950s, 1960s and 1980s"". 5. ""Reason and Lovelessness: Tagore, war crimes, and Justice Pal"". 6. ""Queering the Pitch: Race, class, gender and nation in the Indo-Australian encounter"". 7. ""Applied Theatre and Political Change in Bhutan"". 8. ""The Cultural Politics of Shit: class, gender and public space in India"". 9. ""Zones, Corridors and Postcolonial Capitalism"". 10. ""Australindia: The geography of imperial desire"".
Phillip Darby is co-founder (with Michael Dutton) of the independent Institute of Postcolonial Studies based in Melbourne, and a principal fellow of the School of Social and Political Sciences at the University of Melbourne.