Masculinity, consumerism and the post-national Indian city : streets, Neighbourhoods, home / Sanjay Srivastava
Material type:
- 9781009179867
- 362.50 SRI-S
Item type | Current library | Collection | Shelving location | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() |
BITS Pilani Hyderabad | 360 | General Stack (For lending) | 362.50 SRI-S (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | GBP 75.00. | Available | 47119 |
Imagining the city as a series of interconnected spaces, the book explores how several such connections – between the home and the street, family and public spaces, religious and non-religious contexts, for example – relate to the topic of masculinity. How do men – elite, subaltern, consumers, 'heads' of the family, members of 'Hindu fundamentalist' organisations, readers of pulp fiction and 'footpath pornography', those who admire the 'strong' political leader – move between these spaces, define them and are defined by them? Urbanisation in India is a vibrant site of an extraordinary cultural, social and economic churn, a context of both the consolidation of masculine identities as well as anxieties regarding their place in the city. The book suggests that sustained and in-depth engagements with specific historical and social contexts avoids tendencies to imagine cities as nodes of comparison that frequently generates universal models of urbanism.
Reorients the study of Indian society through placing cities at its centre
Provides an understanding of how different contexts and processes are related and why the method of intersectional analysis is important for an understanding of contemporary life
Presents a socially and historically informed understanding of how spaces are gendered and cities are sites of power, anxiety, identity and changing aspirations
There are no comments on this title.