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E-raamat: Holy Science: The Biopolitics of Hindu Nationalism

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In the early 2000s, as India was emerging as a global superpower, a key development project off the southern Indian coast was thwarted by intense opposition. The construction of a new shipping canal angered Hindu nationalists who sought to protect what they saw as the land bridge built by Hanuman and his monkey army in the Indian epic Ramayana. Environmentalists also protested against the canal, claiming that it severely threatened a fragile and globally important ecosystem. As the controversy grew, the religious and environmental arguments converged, reflecting the evolving relationship between science and religion that marks the hypernationalism of the contemporary Hindu right.

Through this case study and others, Banu Subramaniam demonstrates the limitations of the "universality" of science, to reveal how science in postcolonial contexts is always locally inflected and modulated. Evoking the rich mythology of comingled worlds, where humans, animals, and gods transform each other and ancient history, Subramaniam demonstrates how Hindu nationalism sutures an ideal past to technologies of the present by making bold claims about the scientific basis of Vedic civilization and deploying this narrative to consolidate caste, patriarchal, and Hindu power. Moving beyond a critique of this emerging bionationalism, this book explores the generative possibility of myth and story, interweaving compelling new stories of fictionalized beings like the avatars of Hindu mythology into a rich analysis that animates alternative imaginaries and "other" worlds of possibilities.

Arvustused

"Reading Banu Subramaniam is equal parts pleasure and provocation...Subramaniam's work is a testament to the power of interdisciplinary impurity between the humanities and sciences."

(Reading Religion)

Muu info

Winner of Michelle Kendrick Memorial Book Prize 2020 (United States).
Prologue. In Search of India: The Inner Lives of Postcolonialism ix
Avatars for Lost Dreams: The Land of Lost Dreams xv
Introduction. Avatars for Bionationalism: Tales from (An)Other Enlightenment 3(46)
Avatar #1 The Story of Uruvam
46(3)
1 Home and the World: The Modern Lives of the Vedic Sciences
49(27)
Avatar #2 The Story of Amudha
72(4)
2 Colonial Legacies, Postcolonial Biologies: The Queer Politics of (Un) Natural Sex
76(37)
Avatars #3 The Story of Nadu and Piravi
108(5)
3 Return of the Native: Nation, Nature, and Postcolonial Environmentalism
113(32)
Avatar #4 The Story of Neram
141(4)
4 Biocitizenship in Neoliberal Times: On the Making of the "Indian" Genome
145(37)
Avatar #5 The Story of Arul
178(4)
5 Conceiving a Hindu Nation: (Re)Making the Indian Womb
182(27)
Avatar #6 The Story of Kalakalappu
206(3)
Conclusion. Avatars for Dreamers: Narrative's Seductive Embrace 209(6)
Notes on the Mythopoeia 215(8)
Epilogue. Finding India: The Afterlives of Colonialism 223(8)
A Note of Gratitude and Appreciation 231(6)
Notes 237(6)
References 243(42)
Index 285
Banu Subramaniam is professor of women, gender, and sexuality studies at University of Massachusetts, Amherst, and author of Ghost Stories for Darwin: The Science of Variation and the Politics of Diversity, winner of the 2016 Ludwik Fleck Award from the Society for the Social Studies of Science.