Composing Violence

Composing Violence The Limits of Exposure and the Making of Minorities - Theory in Forms

Paperback (22 Feb 2023)

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Publisher's Synopsis

In 2002, armed Hindu mobs attacked Muslims in broad daylight in the west Indian state of Gujarat. The pogrom, which was widely seen over television, left more than one thousand dead. In Composing Violence Moyukh Chatterjee examines how highly visible political violence against minorities acts as a catalyst for radical changes in law, public culture, and power. He shows that, far from being quashed through its exposure by activists, media, and politicians, state-sanctioned anti-Muslim violence set the stage for transforming India into a Hindu supremacist state. The state's and civil society's responses to the violence, Chatterjee contends, reveal the constitutive features of modern democracy in which riots and pogroms are techniques to produce a form of society based on a killable minority and a triumphant majority. Focusing on courtroom procedures, police archives, legal activism, and mainstream media coverage, Chatterjee theorizes violence as a form of governance that creates minority populations. By tracing the composition of anti-Muslim violence and the legal structures that transform that violence into the making of minorities and majorities, Chatterjee demonstrates that violence is intrinsic to liberal democracy.

Book information

ISBN: 9781478019664
Publisher: Duke University Press Books
Imprint: Duke University Press
Pub date:
DEWEY: 303.60954
DEWEY edition: 23
Language: English
Number of pages: 184
Weight: 284g
Height: 152mm
Width: 230mm
Spine width: 19mm