On the Problem of Nation(alism): Persistence and Absence in the Indian Post-Colony
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Synot, Edward
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Abstract
The search for an origin of the nation is destined to remain structured by an aporia that signals the productive irresolution of signification. In a sense, presence is always to arrive in the future, to be made anew. In post-colonial India the Muslim other embodies the ghostly trace of an undecidable figure that characterizes the aporia at the heart of the claim of Hindutva nationalism to a universal purchase on Mother India. The Muslim other then, as the ghost of the undecidable, becomes a metaphor for the fundamental fracture or split in the Hindutva nationalist imaginary, a specter which cannot be resolved and which indeed founds the very (im)possibility of the Hindutva Indian nation itself.
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Law, Culture and the Humanities
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20
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3
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Silva-Wijeyeratne, RD; Synot, E, On the Problem of Nation(alism): Persistence and Absence in the Indian Post-Colony, Law, Culture and the Humanities, 2024, 20 (3), pp. 498-509